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THE LIBRARY 

OF 

THE UNIVERSITY 

OF CALIFORNIA 

PRESENTED BY 

PROF. CHARLES A. KOFOID AND 

MRS. PRUDENCE W. KOFOID 



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KRIDER^S 



SPORTING ANECDOTES, 



ILLUSTRATIVE OF THX HABITS OF 



CEKTAIN VARIETIES 



AMERICAN GAME. 



EDITED BY H. MILNOBl KLAPP 



\ 



PHILADELPHIA: 
A. HART, LATE CAREY & HART, 

126 CHESTNUT STREET. 

1853. 



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Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1853, by 
JOHN KRIDER, 

i n the Clerk's Office of the District Court of ibe United States, for the Eastern 
District of Pennsylvania. 



J. H. JONES, PRINTKK, 

34 Carter's Alley. 



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TO 

THE SPORTSMEN 



AMERICA, 



Tins BOOK IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED 



BT THE AUTHOR. 



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PREFACE. 



In offering these unpretending pages to the 
public, it is simply the wish of the author and 
his editor to draw its attention more particu- 
larly to American field sports, and the reader 
will soon find, that, avoiding the tedium of a 
regular treatise or manual, we speak right on, 
with the hope to interest and amuse. If suc- 
cessful in this, our point is gained. 



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CONTENTS. 



Familiar Introductory remarks on the character 

Snipe Shooting, . - . - 

Woodcock Shooting, - - . 

The Rice Bunting or Reed Bird, &c., - 

The Grass Plover, - - - . 

The Bull-headed or Golden Plover, 

Rail Shooting, . - - 

Partridge Shooting, - - - 

Duck Shooting, 

Canvass-Back Duck, 

Red-headed Duck, - 

American Widgeon, 

Scaup Duck, 

Canada Goose, - - - 

Pigeon-Match Shooting, 

Field Dogs, - - - 



Oog, 



PAGE 

5 

40 
73 
113 
118 
123 
126 
157 
218 
219 
221 
222 
225 
254 
272 
278 



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KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 



fajvuliar introductory remarks on the 
character of the dog. 

It has always seemed to us a thing worthy of 
note that the dog alone, of the entire brute crea- 
tion, should especially attach himself to man. 
Many instances are, indeed, upon record where 
animals of a different species have manifested an 
extraordinary affection for particular individuals. 
Among the Arabs, by whom the animal is hu- 
manely treated, the horse stands pre-eminent in 
this respect; and who has not read of the Cos- 
sack's steed, which 

" Obeyed his voice and came to call, 
And knew him in the midst of all, 
Though thousands were around, and night, 
Without a star, pursued her flight." 

This, which would seem sufficiently poetic 
as related of the horse, is literally a matter of 
fact with the dog, whom Byron, as every one 
knows, has selected, in more instances than 



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6 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

one, to satirize mankind. However, misan- 
thropy apart, in sober prose it cannot be denied, 
that from the moment Dash opens his eyes 
on external things, he recognizes the presence 
of man, and soon follows his footsteps as the 
humblest and most devoted of his servitors. 
Nay, many a sportsmaiji has noticed the puppies 
of a litter, not yet arrived at the momentous plinth 
day, strive to lick the hand which caressed them, 
and watched the superannuated pointer leave his 
bed in the shade, and still cheerily constant to 
his text, totter on to the field at the heels of his 
master. Perhaps the reader has often been 
amused, in the street, when observing the air . of 
grave importance with which one dog, after a 
brief colloquy with another, will hurry on to join 
his owner. There is something actually distress- 
ing, too, in the anxiety manifested in the looks, 
voice and actions of a lost dog. Superstition, as 
usual, has appropriated to herself the prolonged 
and melancholy howl, with which he seems to 
abandon himself to despair, when his search has 
proved unavailing, and night, in a strange place, 
settles down at last upon his houseless head. On 
such occasions he will often seat himself on his 
haunches beneath the nearest window, and, point- 
ing his nose towards heaven, appal the ears of 



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CHARACTER OF THE DOG. 7 

the inmates with his boding and ill-omened cry. 
One may readily imagine the effect produced in 
the sick chamber, or at the family fire-side, by 
these disheartening sounds. If, like the wander- 
ing harper, he intends his distracting discord as 
an appeal to the sympathies of the good people 
within, it is almost superfluous to say that his 
expectations are illy repaid, since we have no 
doubt that the reader will agree with us that there 
hardly exists, within the range of the census, that 
super-excellent Samaritan, who has ever opened 
his heart or his doors to a stray cur. The 
cry, however, like that of the famishing wolf, 
appears to be a mere ebullition of despair. Some 
dogs, however, whose dispositions, we are inclined 
to think, are slightly tinged with romance, are 
much in the habit of serenading " the refulgent 
queen of night," in this interesting way. In 
general, though, be it said, the dog's star is his 
master's eye, and he wisely leaves the celestial 
orbs to poets, lovers and astronomers, as those 
whom they most concern. We,have never heard 
that the dog of our North American Indian dif- 
fers at all from his civilized brother in this last 
respect, although, ia accordance with the untu- 
tored creed of his master, he might, with great 
consistency, cast an occasional glance towards the 



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8 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

happy hunting grounds, when game was espe- 
cially scarce in the terrestrial forests. In large 
cities, where the dog is seldom called upon to 
fight, or even die, for his master, with a whim- 
sical degree of apprehension he is observant to 
share in his every humor, whether it be to chase 
strange cats in the garden, dive for stones in a 
horse-bucket, point a partridge in a basket, or, 
semper re composita, to take a strut with the dan- 
dies on the sidewalk. But there is one thing 
which he drops his tail against, and therein con- 
sists his claim to gentility — he has a soul above 
work. Travellers may tell you long stories about 
the dogs of Labrador and Newfoundland, and 
even in our own land you may occasionally hear 
of a butter churn, a small threshing machine, or 
something of that sort, turned by dogs; but take 
our word for it, that in these very instances, 
which they make so much noise about, the animal 
is reduced from a state of humble companionship 
to that of absolute slavery, and that every mo- 
ment's labor eked out of him is through pure fear 
of the lash. The sledge dogs, by their incessant 
snarling and fighting in gears, sufficiently show 
their abhorrence of the system; let but a wild 
reindeer cross their path through the snow, and 
off goes the entire pack in full chase, regardless 



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CHARACTER OF THE DOG. 9 

of sledge or driver, from the incumbrance of the 
, last of which they, indeed, speedily rid them- 
selves. We have heard it acknowledged in the 
far west, where Tray has sometimes been set to 
churn or to spin, that, like most other unwilling 
servitors, if not closely watched, he is seldom to 
be found when his services are most particularly 
required. The man who would advocate the 
propriety of placing a dog in a cart or a tread- 
mill, deserves to be shunned by the entire canine 
race; and where, we would ask, is the Pharisee 
of such superlative leaven as to deny all sympa- 
thy with that scarcely less noble being, whon^ 
the proudest monarchs and mightiest minds of 
the universe, in every age, have made their com- 
panion? 

What ! force Hark, Beppo, Towser and Dash 
— not to speak of Silver, Mountain and Blanche, 
whom Shakspeare has immortalized— ^/brca these 
to work ! Why, what would the dogs of Egypt, 
who once had divine honors paid to them, say to 
this? Reflect, gentle reader, how our Leather- 
stocking — that familiar and much admired crea- 
tion of the genius which has recently died from 
among us — reflect how he would have looked, if 
some pumpkin-headed squatter had demanded 
the loan of his hound, to set in a rustic tread- 



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10 KRIDBE'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

mill. We think we see the indignant old hnnter 
grasping " Killdeer" like a vice, as, with back- 
woods emphasis, he tells the oaf that "the thing 
aire ont of reason and agin all natur." When 
your dog degenerates and becomes vicious, then, 
if you are conscientiously opposed to capital 
punishment, condemn him, if you please, to hard 
labor; but while he is equal to the sample of his 
race, ennobled as it is by the unanimous decree 
of mankind, for your sake, as well as his own, 
treat him accordingly. 

We will now, with the reader's permission, 
relate an example of the curious effect which this 
forced derogation of character, once produced on 
the conduct of a respectable house-dog. 

A gentleman was walking along the main street 
of the fine old borough of Germantown, when he 
was met by a large dog harnessed to a sort of 
tilbury, in which was seated a diminutive invalid, 
the son of a storekeeper in the place. The boy 
held the lines in his hand, with an important 
look on his pale face; but the aspect of the dog 
was sulky and malapropos j as if keenly conscious 
of his degradation. With his tail down and his 
ears back, he moyed on slowly and unwillingly 
enough, until a setter, which was in attendance 
upon the pedestrian, came up, and halting on the 



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CHARACTER OF THE DOG. H 

pike, cocked his ears, perhaps with concern at 
the pitiful condition to which the unfortunate 
custodian of the threshold was reduced. No 
sooner had the sullen eyes of the latter fallen 
upon the free and life-like figure of Beppo, than, 
uttering a savage growl, he flew from the ele- 
vated sidewalk fall at the other's throat, pitching 
out the invalid, overturning the Tom Thumb 
tilbury, and scouring along the road after the 
innocent cause of the catastrophe, who, upon 
being thus charged, as it were, by a chariot, fled 
as if death were at his heels. Whether, in this 
case, the grocer's dog imagined that he detected 
something quizzical in the expression of the set- 
ter's face, or was merely infuriated at the diffe- 
rence of their respective conditions at the moment, 
is a matter of doubt. The effect produced, how- 
ever, was solely attributable to the presence of 
the stranger's dog, since it appeared that the boy 
had been daily in the habit of airing himself in 
this way for some time previ'ous. The fugitive 
took sanctuary with our jovial host of the But- 
tonwood, and the assailant, it concerns us to state, 
received a severe threshing for his indirect 
though outrageous exertions in favor of canine 
freedom. 

Dogs have been known to form offensive and 



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12 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

defensive alliances with each other, which, like 
those of the princes of the earth, are liable to 
abrupt and disagreeable conclusions. 

A physician of this city had in his stable a 
terrier, which formed a league of this kind with 
an individual of the same stock, belonging to a 
sugar refiner in the vicinity. The chief end of 
this alliance, it was observed, was to mount guard 
at a corner of the court on which the stable was 
located, and make battle with any thing in the 
shape of perambulating dog flesh which might 
happen to pass that way. Now, there lived, about 
a square above the court, a Dutch baker, who 
possessed a large dog, which regularly attended 
his master as he went his morning rounds, with 
'^the staff of life" on his shoulder. This was a 
quiet, sleek, well-intentioned animal, but a few 
months out of the days of his puppyhood. His 
name was Tim, and we can safely aver that he 
was a dog of repute, harboring no evil designs of 
any kind in his head ; which, to tell the truth, 
was very far from being the case with the two 
terriers. 

Time after time had the latter assailed and 
beaten the baker's dog, and no redress could the 
sufferer obtain, except, perhaps, when some 
vagrant boy, in his zeal for fair play, would shy 



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CHARACTER OP THE DOG. 13 

a stone at the heads of the two bullies. The peo- 
ple of the neighborhood were too busy to attend 
to the quarrels of dogs; so that, unless the fates 
interfered in some unforeseen way, there really 
appeared to be no salvation for Tim, since, in the 
ordinary course of things, there was every pros- 
pect that the breath of life was eventually to be 
worried out of his nostrils. 

Months passed away, and the dog increased 
in size and strength, but the evil under which he 
had so long howled was by no mpans abated. So 
far from it, indeed, that he was now obliged to 
leave the baker every morning at the first street 
above the court, and make the circuit of the 
square to escape the expectant fangs of these two 
sons of Cerberus. 

We have no doubt that this troubled Tim 
exceedingly, for a close observer of these saga- 
cious animals will tell you, that if there is any 
thing which a faithful dog takes a praiseworthy 
pride in, it is in appearing to the best advantage 
in the eyes of his master. It is but fair to state 
that the two tyrants sometimes engaged in terri- 
ble combats with strange dogs, and that, so far as 
we can learn, they invariably came off victorious. 
No doubt these desperate contests, witnessed from 
afar, struck additional terror into the heart of 
Tim. 



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14 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES, 

However, it so happened, that upon a certain 
New Year's day, as the doctor and the sugar 
refiner were conversing in the street, they saw 
the baker coming towards them, with his sleek, 
black dog behind him. The two tyrants, as 
usual, were sitting at the corners of the court, 
on the qui vive — the bigger, whose name was 
Flame, ensconced on a fire-plug, and the lesser, 
who was called Smoke, watching under a lamp- 
post. The name of the court, we had for- 
gotten to state, was Concord Place, which was 
somewhat at variance with the character of its 
guardians, although Relief alley, a narrow pas- 
sage directly opposite, was no misnomer, so far 
as it is connected with the anecdote, inasmuch 
as it had often saved Tim, at need, from the teeth 
of his determined assailants. 

''Now," said the doctor, ''let us watch the 
motions of these three dogs." 

"I have often noticed them before," said the 
other, " and the baker's will certainly leave him 
at the next street." 

But whether it was that the evil had arrived 
at that pitch at which endurance ceases to be a 
virtue, even in a dog, or that the day being the 
first of the year, Tim was determined to begin it, 
more magistrij with a new talley, is open to free 



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. CHARACTER OP TIIE DOG. 15 

discTission; we only, as historians, faithfully 
chronicle the fact, that, with head and tail erect, 
deviating not a hair's breadth from his route, 
Tim sturdily stuck at the Dutchman's heels. 

The two tjrrants bristled their spines, erected 
their crept ears, and waited for the moment to 
pounce upon him. The baker stopped at a cus- 
tomer's door, delivered his bread, and passed on; 
Tim followed; Flame glanced at Smoke, and, as 
was the rule of warfare observed by the bellige- 
rents, the latter advanced to commence the on- 
slaught, nothing doubting of an easy victory. 

But the instant that he came sufficiently near, 
Tim, the late n^eek and gentle disciple of endu- 
rance, savagely seized him by the back, and lift- 
ing him clear from the ground, shook him in a 
manner which, however delightful to the doctor, 
must have been as disagreeable as unexpected to 
him. 

"Served him exactly right," said the sugar 
refiner, gruffly, while the doctor cried encore ; 
and a quick eye, accustomed to read the physi- 
ognomies of quadrupeds, might have noticed 
something of unpleasant surprise in the looks of 
the chief tyrant. Nevertheless, quickly descend- 
ing from his post of observation, he boldly ad- 
vanced to the rescue of his comrade, who wa« no 



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16 KRIDBR'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

match for Tim, now that his ire was fully awa- 
kened. 

The beholders were now all expectation to see 
what the baker's dog would do in this emer- 
gency. The result was not long in doubt; for, 
as Flame approached, Tim gave Smoke a last 
severe shake, which effectually settled him for 
the nonce, and meeting his chief assailant halt 
way, grappled him with a fury, which, as he was 
really the stronger dog of the two, landed him on 
his back in the kennel, in a moment. Smoke, 
beholding this with increased dismay, fled in 
inglorious haste, through Relief alley, leaving the 
field to the two remaining combatants, who 
fought vigorously for a few minutes longer, the 
one loath to lose his ancient supremacy, and the 
other determined to provide anew for the contin- 
gencies of the future. At length the scale ot 
victory turned — the doctor's dog cried miserecor- 
dia; and Tim, after fairly vanquishing the two 
redoubtable tyrants, trotted on, like a knight- 
errant of old, to rejoin the baker's banner. 

''Now," said the doctor, ''that dog has taught 
us a lesson, which the crowned heads of Europe 
might read with advantage." 

"Yes," answered the other; and he must have 
premeditated the action, for, to my certain know- 



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CHARACTER OP THE DOG. 17 

ledge, nothing could have previously induced 
him to pass that court when your dog or mine 
was in sight." 

"It looks very like the reasoning power, I con- 
fess," said the doctor; " but see, here comes your 
dog back." 

The most curious part of the affair now occur- 
red; for as Smoke came nigh to Flame, for the 
purpose, no doubt, of comparing injuries, the 
latter, who was licking his wound?, instantly 
flew upon him, and, without paying the least 
regard to their former relations, inflicted upon 
him a tremendous mauling. At this sight the 
physician, unwilling to lose his professional gra- 
vity in the street, started instanter for his office ; 
while the sugar refiner, albeit not possessed of so 
quick a sense of the ludicrous, retreated to a 
counting room in a huge smoky building across 
the way. The alliance was, however, dissolved, 
and the two discomfitted tyrants were never seen 
together from that instant. 

In this anecdote, for the truth of which we can 
vouch, we have strikingly displayed, first, a mu- 
tual understanding, resulting in a regular alli- 
ance for the purpose of aggressive warfare ; next, 
endurance, amounting almost to abject cowardice, 
on the part of a third dog; then a noble resolu- 



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18 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

tion to resist oppression to the last; and, lastly, 
a violent dissolution of the league, consequent 
upon the signal defeat of the two tyrants. 

We will now relate a few examples of the 
inveterate pertinacity with which dogs that have 
once worried sheep, seize every opportunity of 
indulging, by stealth, in their flagitious inclinar 
tions; of the cunning which they display in 
endeavoring to elude detection, and of the arti- 
fices which they make use of, to induce other 
better disposed individuals to join them in their 
marauding expeditions. These have been long 
known to the world, and still furnish a favorite 
theme, on a winter's night, at the farmer's fire- 
side. 

Not a villager but has his say on the subject ; 
not a herdsman but can add his woful experience 
of the slaughter. Sixty, seventy, and even a 
hundred sheep, worried in a single night, have 
been the astounding effects of this destructive 
propensity. In parts of the country where large 
flocks are raised, the dog, as representing his 
race, figures full as often in the imagination of 
the youthful grazier on the prongs of a good steel 
pitchfork, as he does, when arrayed in his glory, 
as "honest Tray" or "faithful Towser," of the 
school book. 



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CHARACTER OF THE DOG. 19 

Short shrift is accorded to the robber, when 
caught red-footed and in the act, or tracked from 
the scene of blood, through the tell-tale snow, to 
the unconscious homestead. 

Vain are the entreaties of the house-wife or 
children, if, indeed, they find voices to plead for 
the midnight assassin, who, apart from his secret 
acts of villainy, may have been a very serviceable 
animal. The master himself has little to say, 
since slay the dog or pay for the sheep is the 
grim alternative. The axe, the rope, or the fowl- 
ing piece, settles the matter on the spot; while 
the very porch, which has so long sheltered the 
culprit, seems half aghast with silent horror. 

The propensity, which is chiefly confined to 
curs and mongrels, undoubtedly descends from 
the wild state of the race, along with other pecu- 
liarities of less import, common to the entire spe- 
cies; such as making lairs in out of the way 
places, hiding bones and surplus food in the 
earth, taking solitary journeys at night, sometimes 
to visit an acquaintance, but more frequently to 
hunt up mischief. 

A dog has been known to leave his home after the 
family had retired, and go to a farm-house several 
miles distant, to join a comrade; after some pre- 
liminary snufiing and capering on the porch, the 



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20 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

two have started for a third farm, six miles from 
the first, and worried sheep. In this instance 
each animal was found in his house before sun- 
rise, and it was only by their tracks in the snow 
that their misdeeds were brought home to them. 

All this reminds us strongly of the wolf. The 
following incident, said to have occurred many 
years ago, in the state of Virginia, west of the 
Blue Ridge, bears a still closer comparison with 
the deeds of that wily and ferocious animal. 

A storekeeper, in a village in that part of the 
country, possessed a remarkably intelligent dog, 
of the mixed Poodle and Newfoundland stock. 
He was of service to his master in guarding his 
property, and had been taught to do many useful 
things, which had become the talk of the country 
side. He would convey parcels home to a cus- 
tomer, carry his master's boots to the shoemaker, 
search diligently for any thing which had been 
lost in the fields or the roadside, patiently watch 
an article to which his attention had been directed, 
and really seemed to comprehend any command 
which was given him. 

Having been well cared for, in spite of the 
cross, he had attained an extraordinary size, and 
was possessed of great activity for so heavy an 
animal. His coat was coarse and heavy; and, in 



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CHAEACTER OF THE DOG. 21 

allusion to its tawny color and something of mag- 
nanimity in his looks, he was called Lion. Of a 
mild, peaceable disposition, though brave as his 
royal namesake, he was a favorite with all visit- 
ors to the store, and only an object of terror and 
dislike to thieves and marauders. His master 
had refused large offers for him ; and at the period 
to which we particularly refer, he was in the 
very prime of his days. 

About five miles north-west of the village and 
three from the main road, was a track of hilly 
land, known in the township as the Hampton 
farm, a large portion of which was devoted to the 
rearing of sheep. 

The Hampton farm had, at different periods, 
suffered, as was supposed, from depredations of 
wolves, which, though becoming scarce in the 
forests of the vicinity, were still occasionally to 
be met with. 

For more than a year not an individual had 
been shot in the township; nevertheless, sheep 
were still worried, from time to time, and suspi- 
cion at last fell upon the dogs of the neighbor- 
hood. But the strictest scrutiny failed to detect 
a single plague spot; and, accordingly, the whole 
corporation of curs was pronounced to be sound. 

The charge then reverted to the wolves; but, 



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22 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

though traps were set on the hills, and a watch 
kept, no signs of a wolf could be perceived. 

A few nights after vigilance had been relaxed, 
a sheepcot was broken into, and a number of the 
flock either slain outright or so mangled as to 
render it necessary to put the knife to their 
throats. 

The grazier and his men were greatly enraged 
at this, and a price of twenty dollars — a large 
sum for the neighborhood — was forthwith set 
upon the depredator's head. 

From the circumstance of there being no snow 
upon the ground at the time, it was, of course, 
impossible to track him; but a close inspection 
of the premises established the fact, that the ani- 
mal was alone and of unusual size. From this 
the conclusion was arrived at that it was a wolf, 
which had its den at a great distance, most pro- 
bably in the mountains at the foot of which the 
farm was located. 

Several good hunters turned out with their 
dogs, but utterly failed to strike the trail, although 
the search was continued for several days. At 
last, however, it so chanced that as one of these 
men was crossing a piece of waste land between 
the sheephills and the main road, an hour or two 
before dawn, he saw, by the waning light of the 



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CHARACTER OF THE DOG. 23 

moon, an animal, which he immediately conjec- 
tured to be a wolf, rising an elevation on his left, 
at a long, loping pace, making, it appeared, for a 
run about two hundred yards distant. 

The man stopped and cocked his rifle, but 
having no dog with him — ^his own having been 
worn out with the previous day's run — prudently 
forbore to fire so long as there existed a doubt 
of his being able to sight a mortal part. The 
creature passed him at full speed, directing its 
course for the run, whither the hunter cautiously 
followed. He soon perceived that it had broken 
the ice, and halted in the water, and under 
cover of inequalities in the ground, he was ena- 
bled to steal, unperceived, within good covering . 
distance. Taking deliberate aim, he pulled the 
trigger, and the brute, leaping up with a loud 
yell, dropped dead on the bank. The hunter 
carefully reloaded his rifle, loosened his knife in 
its sheath, and, with his finger at the guard of 
his piece, slowly advanced to the spot; wlien, 
lo ! instead of a grey wolf, to his utter amaze- 
ment, he immediately recognized, even by the 
imperfect light, the ^lifeless but still quivering 
carcass of the storekeeper's favorite dog. 

After his astonishment had a little subsided, 
he took oflF the scalp, and leaving the body where 



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24 KRIDER'S SPORTINa ANECDOTES. 

it fell, made the best of his way to the grazier's 
house. 

The body of the recreant, suspended by the 
neck in a wagon, was driven in triumph down 
to the village, and subsequent inquiries left not 
a lingering doubt that Lion, with all his remark- 
able qualities, was, after all, but a wolf in dog's 
habiliments. 

It was remembered that at certain periods he 
had refused his food, and appeared sleepy and 
cross; and, upon comparing dates, the parties 
concerned discovered that these were the very 
days after the havoc had been committed. 

He was actually engaged in washing the blood 
of six sheep from his body when the hunter shot 
him ; and, upon being satisfied of this, the whole 
village, with the bereaved storekeeper at their 
head, while they could not help deploring the 
end of so fine an animal, sang Te Deum over the 
fall of so accomplished a villain. 

The honest hunter received his reward, and 
was ever afterwards known by the soubriquet of 
*^ Sampson," inasmuch as it was he who slew 
the Lion. 

All half-grown puppies, from a natural fond- 
ness for mischief, which instigates them to tear 
a hat or a shawl to shreds, and to pursue any 



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CHARACTER OF THE DOG. 25 

object that flies from them, have a disposition to 
chase sheep. A single timely correction is suf- 
ficient to cure this; but when a dog once 
indulges in sheep killing by stealth, the chain 
becomes an imperfect check upon the habit, and 
it is advisable, in all cases, to subject him to far- 
mer's law. A popular English writer has said : 
"in the human mind, ill regulated, there is a 
dark desire for the forbidden;" the same remark, 
in certain cases, is applicable to the dog. Among 
all the instances which have come under our 
notice, we remember but one in which the ani- 
mal was influenced by necessity, and not from 
choice. The nearer the dog approaches to purity 
in stock, the nobler is his character, and the less 
he is addicted to evil ways. 

We have never heard the clean bred pointer 
accused of sheep killing. The setter is not so 
free from taint. Indeed, he has been known, in 
one instance, at least, to forsake his professional 
business and assail a flock of sheep, which has 
come in his way in the course of a day's sport. 
This dog, said to have been an imported English 
stock, unaccountably left his master, in the 
stubbles, and a few minutes afterwards was 
actually seen, by the proprietor of the land, 
throttling sheep in an adjoining field. The man 



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26 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

set off to his house for the gun, and during his 
absence, the dog, recalled by his master's whistle, 
returned to his side, ranged out, and pointed ; 
then stealing away, while the shooter was 
charging, went back to his nefarious work, just 
as the avenger of innocence, armed with one of 
those long-stocked, old-fashioned pieces, which 
so often sent death into the British ranks in the 
days of '76, made his timely appearance upon 
the scene. The ancient revolutioner was 
promptly levelled, and, of course, the malefactor 
died the death. 

He was in his third year, and, as far as could 
be ascertained, this was his first transgression. 

We have heard of another case, where a set- 
ter, suspected of a similar piece of atrocity, was 
penned up for the night with a pugnacious old 
ram, who, it was supposed, would not fail to kill 
or cure him before morning. 

The supposition was ill-founded, however, 
for at daylight the patriarch of the flock was 
found stark and stiff, with his throat terribly 
torn, while the setter, wholly uninjured, was 
wagging his tail to get out. 

There is a loping dog, a cross between the 
pointer and setter — sometimes rough and some- 
times smooth — which we would caution our 
young readers to have nothing to do with. There 



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CHARACTER OF THE DOG. 27 

is a taint of the hound or cur in his back stock ; 
he has no style in his hunting, is occasionally 
sullen and ferocious, displays comparatively 
little affection for his master, and often proves 
to be an inveterate sheep-killer, 

Mr. Krider once owned a dog of this descrip- 
tion, which was possessed of no good qualities, 
except an excellent nose and great steadiness on 
his point. He was gaunt, coarse xoated, had a 
gloomy and reserved air, as if constantly brood- 
ing over his misdeeds, and showed so little con- 
cern for his master's interests as to be constantly 
snarling and snapping at his customers. Being 
unwilling to slay the brute, and supposing that 
his temper was tried in the store, his owner pre- 
sented him to one of his workmen. In a few 
days he bit the man's wife, when his new master 
incontinently discharged a load of buckshot in 
his breast, and dismissed Growler to the shades 
forever. Some time after his exit, the farmer 
from whom he had been purchased, acknow- 
ledged that he had strongly suspected him of 
destroying sheep. 

What a contrast to these renegades does the 
well-known shepherd's dog of the old world 
present ! His instinct, said to be superior to all 
other varieties, is solely directed to the preser- 
vation of the flock. 



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28 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

How faithfully, how completely, he fulfils the 
duties of a guardian, the reader is, doubtless, 
well aware. In the vast fazendas^ or cattle 
estates, of southern Brazil, where the flocks have 
a multitude of enemies, two dogs are considered 
sufficient to shepherd a thousand sheep. But 
these dogs, as soon as whelped, are suckled by 
a ewe ; no food is given to them ; at night they 
are shut up in the fold; during the day they 
accompany the flock to the field ; and when full 
grown, instinctively assume the office of its 
guardian and protector. While the flock is 
grazing, the vigilance of the guardian, directed 
alike against the hordes of wild dogs, which 
infest the plains, and the birds of prey, which 
pick out the eyes of the lambs, is argus-eyed 
and unceasing. When a ewe lambs in the 
field, and the lamb is too weak to follow its 
mother, one dog will remain for some time beside 
it; if he finds that it is still unable to walk, as 
evening draws near, he carefully takes it in his 
mouth and carries it home to the fold. 

They have the same wild and melancholy 
aspect, and the same indisposition to associate 
with strange dogs, which distinguishes the shep- 
herd's dog of the Alps and the Pyrenees. 

Here the naturalist has a grand picture for 
contemplation and study, for here we have ex- 



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CHARACTER OF THE DOG. 29 

hibited, in a curious light, two traits which most 
ennoble the dog — fidelity and courage. Now to 
shift the portrait. 

Some of our readers will remember to have 
noticed, a year or two since, three dogs, without 
masters, wandering together about the streets 
of the city — sometimes seen lying, side by side, 
on a door step, or in the shade of a garden wall ; 
sometimes foraging in the alleys and empty 
market houses ; but from their deformed appear- 
ance, constant companionship, and absolute dis- 
connection with man, always impressing the 
mind of the beholder with a feeling of desolation 
strangely foreign to the scene. One, a female, 
with a broken limb, curiously distorted, was a 
gaunt, hollow-eyed brute, upon whose infirmi- 
ties the others seemed to attend, as we observed 
that she was always the first to move on after a 
halt ; another, an old mongrel mastiflf, had lost 
his upper lip, which gave him a very unsightly 
look ; but the third was perfect in his parts — a 
meek, mild-eyed cur, who appeared to have 
joined the two misanthropes because he had been 
fairly forsaken by the rest of the world. 

There was something strongly expressive of 
apathetical indifference to the beings around 
them, in the aspect of the two first. Strictly 



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30 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

shunning the society of their race, they seemed 
an isolated community in the midst of strangers. 
The human voice, no matter how kindly tem- 
pered, produced no visible effect, except to make 
them move listlessly on. The last would acknow- 
ledge sympathy with man, by wagging his tail 
when spoken to ; but no artifice could induce 
him to loiter behind, when his companions had 
once resumed their way. 

Some mysterious feeling appeared to bind 
them inseparably together. They never dis- 
agreed, and were always in good condition. We 
have been assured, by a gentleman of the highest 
respectability, that his family have repeatedly 
seen the last, when food was offered him, quietly 
go and deposit it at the feet of his friends. 

And thus, for several successive seasons, the 
strange trio were seen in various parts of the 
crowded city — always together, and always by 
themselves — ^lodging, no one cared where, and 
eventually disa])pearing, no one knew how.* 

*0ne fact, which had nearly escaped our memory, while it 
proves that even the maternal instinct did not interfere with their 
bond of attachment, goes to show that the female must, at the period 
referred to, have had some place of shelter. The last time we saw 
them, her appearance indicated that she had littered but a few 
days previous ; but where her whelps were concealed, or where she 
rejoined her companions on their daily rounds, we are unable to 
say. 



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CHARACTER OP THE DOG. 31 

We have no comments to offer upon this sin- 
gular alliance, Bulwer, in his "Children of 
Night," makes Messrour, the immortal, say, 
that in a period of five thousand years, spent in 
the study of man, he had not yet discovered the 
mysteries in the heart of a boor ; how then, shall 
we attempt to pry through that impenetrable 
veil which the Creator of all things, in his Om- 
niscence, has placed between man made after 
his own image, and the brutes over which he 
has given him sway? 

Dogs sometimes manifest a taste for the sweets 
of liberty in rather a whimsical way. 

A friend of ours once owned a beautiful setter, 
who, unfortunately, preferring a wilderness to a 
garden, uprooted rose-bushes, grubbed up gera. 
niums, tore down grape vines, and made bone 
depositories of strawberry beds. He was, of 
course, put on chain. On the first opportunity 
he disappeared, and for weeks nothing was heard 
of his whereabouts. At last they found him in 
the street, with a collar on his neck, bearing the 
name and residence of a new owner. An expla- 
nation ensued, when it was discovered that he 
had attached himself to the person in question, 
with whom he had been residing ever since his 
disappearance, and in whose company he had 



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32 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

repeatedly passed his old master's residence, 
without manifesting the least signs of recogni- 
tion. Indeed, from his apparent indifference to 
all parts of the city, and his off-hand way of 
domiciliating in his new quarters, it had been 
supposed that he had strayed away from some 
stranger, en route to a distant part of the 
country. He was again chained to his old dog- 
house, and, in the course of time, again escaped, 
A month elapsed, and his disconsolate master, 
while in the act of leaving Mr. Krider's store, 
situated on the north-east corner of Second and 
Walnut streets, between the two principle mar- 
ket houses of the city, again encountered his 
lost property, in excellent condition — this time 
hand and glove with a butcher's boy, who was 
carrying home a basket of meat. 

Our friend at once stopped short, planting 
himself before the bulkhead, directly in the 
dog's way. 

The animal passed the critical spot with the 
utmost nonchalance^ and was wending his way 
to parts unknown, when his master, provoked 
as well as amused with the cut direct, pro- 
nounced, in a voice of thunder, the awful word 
^'Mart!" 

** I really thought," said he, in relating the anec- 



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CHARACTER OF THE DOG. 33 

dote, '*the dog would have sunk down through 
the bricks. It was laughable to notice the rueful 
countenance of the scapegrace, as he crouched 
on the pavement, with a slight twitch of his tail, 
one eye fixed imploringly on me, and the other 
turned towards the boy, over whose chubby face 
was beginning to steal the conviction that they 
two must part. The affair reminded me strongly, 
at the moment, of two line's in one of Scott's 
border ballads, which may thus be parodied : 

The conscious cur fell to the ground, 

And inly muttered, * found ! found ! found I' '' 

It is now some years since Mart slipped his 
collar in totOy for he continued in his vagrant 
habits to the last, at one time attaching himself 
to a rigger in Reed street, and upon another to 
a recruiting sergeant of marines. Influenced 
by his impatience of restraint, he may, possibly, 
have gone off* to join the Mormons. 

His master, with a pertinacity almost as hu- 
morous, insists upon it that he will yet turn up, 
when least expected, and is yearly in the habit 
of visiting the menagerie, in the hopes of finding 
him attached to a caravan. 

This dog was of hardy constitution, a great 
ranger, and uniformly travelled a fast gait. 

Dogs are a superstitious race. We have seen 



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34 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

them tremble and skulk from the sight of their 
shadows moving on the wall. Like horses, they 
are subject to violent paroxysms of fright. We 
have heard of a watch-dog that was fri ghtened in to 
convulsions by the sudden apparition of a man 
in a white coat ; and the most curious exhibition 
of mortal fear which we ever witnessed, was 
consequent upon the introduction of an Isle of 
Sky dog to a hideous Paraguay ape. 

Dogs dream. We have seen the animal start 
on its legs from an uneasy slumber, and bark 
vaguely, yet vehemently, as if at some object in 
the shadow land. On being spoken to it ceased 
at once, and, whining and mumbling, again ad- 
dressed itself to sleep. No doubt can be enter- 
tained of the fact that, in some degree, at least, 
their " lives are two-fold," and that they some- 
times re-enact in sleep the drama of their waking 
hours. 

A merchant of this city was possessed of a 
poodle, which for years had been in the habit of 
bringing him his boots at a certain hour in the 
morning, preparatory to their usual walk to the 
counting room. The dog usually slept at the 
foot of the staircase, at the second landing of 
which was an entry, leading to his master's bed- 
chamber. 



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CHARACTER OF THE DOG. 35 

The latter was once aroused, at the dead hour 
of night, by a strange scratching at the door, 
which being cautiously opened, old Hugo walked 
slowly in, with his eyes wide open and a boot in 
his mouth. He gravely deposited this at the 
merchant's feet and started for its fellow, but, 
upon being called back and reproved, seemed at 
once to comprehend his mistake. 

He then took up the boot, and as the voice of 
the watchman sounded the hour, looking ridicu- 
lously enough, sneaked down stairs to bed again. 

This is the only case of somnambulism in the 
brute creation, which we remember to have 
heard of. 

The same person was afterwards attacked by 
a fit of the gout, which confined him to his house 
several weeks. 

On the morning succeeding the attack the 
boots appeared in his chamber, as usual; the 
invalid pointed to his swollen feet, swathed in 
flannel and resting upon pillows, whereupon the 
poodle, mistaking his meaning, flew furiously at 
the bandages, and commenced tearing them off, 
giving the unfortunate sufferer the most exquisite 
agony in his well-meant but injudicious attempts 
to remove the embargo on the boots. 

But to come nearer home. Observe your dog 



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36 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

when lie feeds — how his tail goes and his eyes 
pour out thankfulness ! At every mouthful he 
looks up to show his gratitude. We will venture 
to say that few Christians feel a livelier sense of 
devotion at their meals. If he indulges in any 
mirth at his dinner, it is all of a grateful order. 
The hand which feeds him is his divinity, and, 
of course, he looks no higher in returning his 
thanks. 

Twra now to his distant connexion, the cat. 
How she growls, like a tiger over its prey ! Mark 
how she gorges, only purring and looking with 
fierce eyes for more when the last morsel is 
finished. After that, she washes her whiskers 
with a world-wise air, and the entire line of Adam 
is nothing to her until she grows hungry again. 

There is a deal of point, after all, in the juve- 
nile line : 

"Behold Miss Pussy 1 how happy she looks!" 

We have a sort of reverence for the authority 
of the little book quoted from. 

It is ever associated in our mind with the per- 
son of a deceased old lady, who, we believe, led 
half the people in the district in which we were 
born, through its pictured pages. 

It will not do, gentle reader, to cavil at its 
couplets. If Grimalkin is happy, as the learned 



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CHARACTER OF THE DOG. 37 

authority intimates, let us not inquire too closely 
into the sources of her tranquility. Let us rather 
go back to Ponto, whom we left quietly eating 
his dinner. 

Well he repays, by a lifetime of fidelity, all the 
care which you may bestow upon him. What- 
ever class of dogs he may belong to, according to 
his capacity, he will studiously contribute to your 
interests or your sports. 

He is invaluable to the sportsman and the 
agriculturist, and the careful housekeeper will 
hardly sleep sound o' nights, unless Towser be 
loose in the yard. 

He is fond of fun, too, and really epicurean in 
his mode of seeking comfort. Much he prizes a 
snug, warm lodging in winter, and a perfect lux- 
ury it is to see him enjoying a roll upon the 
sunny sod on some cool, clear day in the fall, 
when the north-west wind is stripping the trees, 
and the plaintive calls of the covey, scattered, 
perhaps, by the hawk, are heard over by the 
stubble-field. 

It is a pleasant thing, too, to see him lying 
close in the woods, watching your eye as you 
stand, while the last rays of the setting sun red- 
den the solemn trunks, and still communing 
with autumn, you feel, as it were, the breath of 
3 



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38 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

of winter afar off, as a chill wind sighs through 
the fading foliage, or mournfully rustles the 
withered leaves. Poor Ponto! though he feel 
not the strange delight which waits upon the 
change of season — though he knows not the twi- 
light hour, yet well it becomes him to live the 
comrade of kings and princes, and well he de- 
serves to be remembered' by the genius which 
hallows the scene. 

Bulwer, Burns, Byron and Scott, have all 
owned strong sympathies with the dog. 

If our young friends should be fond of field 
sports, they should never rate the value of Ponto 
solely by his professional accomplishments of 
finding and pointing game. As he is the zeal- 
ous adjutor and partaker of your diversions, he 
should also, in some measure, be your compa- 
nion and your friend. 

You may smile, but well will it be with you, 
when the flush of youth is passed, if you do not 
then rate his fidelity higher than the standard of 
friendship, as it exists in the gay world. 

You will find nothing superior in pathos to the 
tales which are told of the faithfulness of the 
dog. 

It is not many months since we saw in the 
public prints, an account of a party of hunters. 



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CHARACTER OF THE DOG. 39 

who had discovered, in the far west, the corpse 
of an Indian, extended on the prairie, surrounded 
by a gang of wolves, which a famishing dog still 
kept at bay. What a picture for an artist to de- 
lineate, and how forcibly it reminds us of the 
touching lines of the poet! 

" And he was faithful to a corpse, 
And kept the birds and beasts 
Which hungered there, at bay." 

When those whom you are most bound to love 
and reverence, have passed down to the grave — 
when friends fall off, and the darker side of hu- 
manity becomes more and more apparent, as you 
walk through life — then, and not till then, you 
may learn to prize the fidelity of a dog. 

His leaping heart is still for thine, 

Without a thought of guile. 
And in his eyes his truth doth shine, 

As beauty may not smile. 



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SNIPE SHOOTING. 

WILSON'S SNIPE— SCOLOPAX WILSONH. 

Description. — "The snipe is eleven inches 
long, and seventeen in extent ; the bill is more 
than two and a half inches long, fluted length- 
wise, of a brown color, and black towards the 
tip, where it is very smooth while the bird is 
alive, but soon after it is killed, becomes dim- 
pled, like the end of a thimble ; crown black, 
divided by an irregular line of pale brown; 
another broader one, of the same tint, passes 
over each eye ; from the bill to the eye, there is 
a narrow, dusky line ; neck and upper part of 
the breast pale brown, variegated with touches 
of white and dusky; ohin, pale; back and sca- 
pulars, deep velvety black, the latter elegantly 
marbled with waving lines of ferruginous, and 
broadly edged exteriorly with white; wings 
plain dusky, all the feathers, as well as those of 
the coverts, tipped with white ; shoulder of the 
wing, deep dusky brown, exterior quill, edged 
with white ; tail coverts long, reaching within 
three-quarters of an inch of the tip, and of a pale 



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SNIPE SHOOTING. 41 

rust color, spotted with black; tail rounded, 
deep black, ending in a bar of bright ferrugi- 
nous, crossed with narrow, waving lines of 
black, and tipped with whitish; belly, pure 
white ; sides, barred with dusky ; legs and feet, 
a very pale ashy green ; sometimes the whole 
thighs and sides of the vent are tarred with 
dusky and white. The female is more obscure 
in her colors ; the white on the belly being less 
pure, and the black on the back not so deep." 

The winter of 183- had been very severe in 
the middle and eastern states. 

In Pennsylvania it was marked by high winds, 
heavy falls of snow, and unusually low depres- 
sions of the mercury. 

Deer, floundering in the deep drifts, were 
killed in great numbers by the hunters of the 
upper districts, and in the counties adjoining 
Philadelphia the smaller varieties of game nearly 
all perished. Grouse and hares were starved 
out in the hills, or fell an easy prey to the foxes; 
partridges came and fed from the threshing- 
floors ; larks were found dead in the hay-ricks ; 
crows alit upon the offals in the barnyard ; and 
it became necessary to keep the poultry housed, 
and their crops well filled, to save them from 
the hawks, or from freezing to death on their 
roosts. 



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42 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

About the middle of February the severity of 
the season abated. The mercury rose to a genial 
mark; the sky became beautifully clear and 
cloudless ; the ground thawed ; the snow rapidly 
disappeared ; and in a few days the notes of the 
song-sparrow and the blue-bird, gave cheering 
intimations of the near approach of spring. 

Some old farmers in our vicinity professed 
little faith in the assurances of these welcome 
visitors. Sagely shaking their heads, they hus- 
banded their hay-stacks, as they still looked 
askant at the hills and the blue air ; but as the 
weather, uninfluenced by their forebodings, still 
continued mild, we made much of every war- 
bled note, and turned a deaf ear to the croakers, 
vrilling to believe that the Solomons of meadow 
and upland were mistaken for once. 

About this period we received, through the 
village post office, a note from an acquaintance 
in town, with an enclosed dispatch from old 
Pierson of the Pier, announcing, in his usual 
emphatic way, that the meadows above and be- 
low Pennsgrove, New Jersey, were fairly alive 
with snipe. 

We had already observed woodcock flying in 
the evening twilight, and began to flush them, 
by day, in a woods of some extent, where they 



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SNIPE SHOOTING. 43 

had regularly bred for many years. Although 
then anxious to obtain a closer insight into the 
habits of these solitary and retiring birds, which, 
despite the observations of ornithologists, are 
still involved in a certain degree of mystery, we, 
of course, abandoned our investigations on the 
receipt of this intelligence, and summoning 
Czar, who was in fine health and spirits, doubt- 
less anticipating work, set off at once for the 
city, and dropped into Krider's on the morning 
of the succeeding day. 

Our arrangements were soon made, and well 
aware that, should the wind haul to the north- 
west, with a lowering sky, this flight of birds 
would leave the low grounds on the river, and 
seek shelter inland, we took the cars to Wil- 
mington, intending to cross the Delaware to 
Pennsgrove, if possible, on the same afternoon. 

On the road down we will, with the reader's 
permission, give a brief account of the game 
which we were in quest of, and of the descrip-* 
tion of dog, whether rough or smooth, most to 
be preferred in following in this exciting sport. 

It may not be altogether superfluous to remind 
the general reader, that there is but one* species 
of snipe, known to our sportsmen, which will lie 
to, and can be hunted with dogs. This is the 



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44 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

English snipe, once so called, but now, by gene- 
ral consent, named after the great American 
ornithologist who first pointed out the difference 
between it and the European variety. This 
difference, though apparently trifling, was suffi- 
cient, in the judgment of Temminck, Bonaparte, 
and other distinguished writers, to entitle it to 
the rank of a distinct species, universally known 
among naturalists of the present day as Wilson's 
snipe. 

The other American varieties possess nothing 
to attract the pursuit of the sportsman, and are 
therefore abandoned, sans ceremonies to the mar- 
ket shooter. The history of each will be found 
well marked and interesting in its place ; but. 
ne sutor ultra crepidam, as a sophymore would 
say ; we have no room for it here. 

Wilson's snipe has been so often described in 
books, from the tip of the bill to the ends of the 
tail feathers, and is so well known, that we 
might almost forego the minute details of its 
dimensions and markings. 

From the uncertainty attending its move- 
ments on the feeding grounds, the swiftness and 
eccentricity of its flight, the exposure and hard 
hunting required in its pursuit, the rare sport it 
often affords when found, its game-look as it 



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SNIPE SHOOTING. 45 

springs from the marshes, and when brought to 
bag, as well as its delicacy on the table, it has 
long been an object of especial interest to the 
keenest and most imaginative of our sportsmen. 
We have no doubt that one thing which makes 
snipe shooting pre-eminently attractive to some 
sportsmen, is the delightful state of uncertainty 
which now, more than ever, attends the pursuit 
of this species of game. 

Partridge shooting, so long upheld as the beau 
ideal of sport, savors rather too much of the pre- 
serves to be exactly to the taste of a thorough 
hunter. In a country well stocked with game of 
this kind, whenever there are stubbles, at the 
proper time of day there you will find birds; and 
there is something in the half domesticated nature 
of this familiar little member of the gallinaceous 
order, in the loud, clear " all rtghf^ of the male, 
the tender and anxious calls of the scattered co- 
vey, and the extreme terror which they display 
in hiding away from the dogs, which, after a few 
brace are killed, half disarms many a reflective 
sportsman. With the snipe, on the contrary, we 
have no sympathies of this sort ; he is not one of 
lis, but, comparatively speaking, a sort of winged 
cosmopolite ; is often wary and shy, and as soon 
as he springs, begins to exercise his ingenuity to 



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46 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

escape your aim — now darting, like a flash, in 
zigzag lines, and now soaring sky-high, as if to 
top the range of your piece. 

Woodcock shooting in ** the cripple" always 
reminds us of a party of madmen shouting and 
banging away at vampire bats, in the eternal twi- 
light of some equatorial forests. Rail shooting, if 
practiced more than once or twice in a season, 
becomes too tiresome and monotonous to possess 
much interest, except for the sum total boated. 
Duck shooting is a noble diversion; but what 
thrill of expectation is equal to that which the 
sportsman feels, when, after a fruitless hunt over 
acres and acres of heavy ground, he beholds in 
the distance the trusty and indefatigable compa- 
nion of his toil, standing steadily to his point at 
last — or what a more game sight than the grey, 
phantom-like look of the wandering snipe, as 
uttering its peculiar cry, it flits over a wild marsh, 
on a March or November day? 

Being all open shooting, the shooter, of course, 
has an opportunity of observing all the move- 
ments of his dogs, and also of the bird after it has 
sprung ; and on this account alone many shoot- 
ers declare that they had rather have two days of 
good sport at snipe, than a whole season at part- 
ridges or rail. 



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SNIPE SHOOTING. 47 

But why are snipe uncertain in their move- 
ments on the feeding ground ? 

It is supposed to be owing, in some measure, 
to the nature of their food, and to the enormous 
quantity which they require, in common with 
other birds of their genus, and also to their sus- 
ceptibility to the influences of the weather — at 
no season of the year more subject to sudden fluc- 
tuations of temperature than early in the spring. 
Always feeding from choice in open marshes, 
they may be found in sufficient numbers to afford 
excellent sport to-day, when the weather is mo- 
derately warm, and light clouds, borne on a brisk 
breeze from the south-west, cast their shadows on 
bare bog or tussock, as they drift over head. But 
should the wind shift, and come on to blow 
strong . from the north-east, as is often the case 
during the night, the next morning you may tra- 
verse the marshes in vain, in the face of a lower- 
ing sky ; the birds are off" for cover ; and unless 
you have a particular fancy to be detained three 
or four days in a snow storm, at a country inn, 
you had better be off", too, for you will have no 
more shooting on that excursion. 

This is very apt to occur when the birds are 
in advance of the season, and has happened with 
us again and again in March, and even in April. 



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48 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

How often have shooters, knowing that birds 
were on the meadows below, and not wishing to 
start off on Friday or Saturday, postponed their 
departure until the following Monday, when a 
wet gale from the north-east has set in, and no 
further accounts of snipe have been received 
until the wind hauled to a more auspicious point. 

Independent of this, some writers assert that 
the snipe is, naturally, of a restless and capricious 
disposition — that conscious of his powers of 
flight, he often whimsically takes to wing when 
none of the foregoing causes are known to exist, 
apparently delighting in his extent of range; and 
at last suddenly drops down from the field of air 
in some new feeding ground, miles and miles 
from the spot which he so unaccountably aban- 
doned. 

We have no serious objection to investing our 
favorite with this etherial character, making him, 
so to speak, a sort of "dainty ^riel" to his own 
wild will ; but we suspect, nevertheless, that he 
is not exactly like the renowned Scotch geese, 
who liked their play better than their food. 

As his powers of digestion are equally well 
known with those of his flight, we are inclined 
to think that he has still a wary eye to the main 
chance, and that his eccentric coquettings with 



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SNIPE SHOOTING. 49 

his feeding grounds are, in some degree, at least, 
dependent upon an abundance or scarcity of 
food. 

Again and again has the sportsman, by chance 
or the range and instinct of his dog, discovered 
some choice piece of ground, of no great extent, 
which the birds, though allowed not a moment's 
rest, showed the greatest indisposition to leave. 

We remember to have found this to be the 
case many years ago, in a small meadow on Duck 
Creek, immediately back of what is called Smyr- 
na's Landing. No steamboat had ever entered 
the creek at this period, and the place was com- 
paratively unknown to shooters. 

On the meadow referred to snipe were feeding 
in such numbers, that had not the dog been a 
steady old setter, his presence would have been 
a decided disadvantage. As it was he did not 
move five yards in advance of us, and we kept on 
flushing and firing, until, though then an indif- 
ferent snipe shot, we had bagged seventy-two 
birds. When the sun sank upon our sport, the 
ground was covered with wads as with a slight 
sprinkling of snow. 

The next morning, at the instance of the ac- 
quaintance with whom we were sojourning, we 
shifted the scene by shooting in the stubbles ; 



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50 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

and upon visiting the snipe ground on the suc- 
ceeding day, hardly a solitary individual was to 
be found. 

The signs of the affray were there, but the 
meadow was deserted except by a few crippled 
birds. After securing these, aU we could do was 
to sit on a convenient stump and smile at the mo- 
tions of Dash, who, remembering the first day's 
shooting, could scarcely convince himself that 
the game had flown, despite the evidence of his 
nose. 

This flight of snipe were, of course, migrating 
southward, and having pitched into an isolated 
spot where food was abundant, were extremely 
loath to leave it, until their wants were satisfied 
and their powers recruited for new efibrts on the 
wing. 

It is proper to state that the place where the 
birds were found, was composed of a few acres of 
bare, black loam and tussocks, flanked on either 
side by a thick woods. 

Snipe are not, moreover, so extremely sensi- 
tive to frost as the books would lead the unprac- 
tised shooter to suppose. Any person who has 
hunted these birds for successive seasons, will 
tell you that he has killed snipe in considerable 
numbers both in the spring and fall, when the 



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SNIPE SHOOTING. 51 

ice was almost thick enough to bear his tread. 
We, ourselves, have done this more than once in 
particular situations, at Pennsgrove and Dennis- 
ville. New Jersey. A severe frost, sufficient, so 
to speak, to seal the marshes hermetically, of 
course, necessitates them to extend their flight 
beyond the sphere of its influence, by cutting off* 
their supplies; strong easterly blows, whether 
wet or dry, drive them sooner to cover ;* rain 
makes them restless and indisposed to lie to the 
dogs, and eventually forces them into the withered 
rushes and cornfields ; but if caught by a snow 
storm on the marshes — as every old sportsman 
knows is sometimes the case, in spite of what a 
recent writer calls their meteorological fiiculties — 
they seem to lose their natural instinct, and will 
huddle helplessly under the lee of a hill or bank, 
in which situations seven and eight have been 
killed by a farmer's boy at a single shot. 

As regards the manner of hunting "gray 
snipe," and their sprite-like efforts to escape when 
flushed, we are no book-makers, and the less we 
dilate on these subjects the better for all parties 
concerned. 



* At Mannahawkin, on the New Jersey coast, Mr. Krider has 
found them on such occasions harboring in the "cripples.'^ 



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62 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

If you are naturally a sportsman, you will soon 
learn how to approach and to kill them, albeit, 
on the first few trials, the eccentricities which 
they practice on the wing, and the elfish ease 
with which they seem to evade the contents of 
both barrels, will leave an impression on your 
mind, which, however annoying then, becomes a 
very pleasant and exciting reminiscence after 
you have learned how to knock them down, right 
and left, secundem artem. In this, gentle reader, 
consists the gist of the secret of the true sports- 
man's love for snipe shooting. As to exposure 
and hard work, no man who has not a quick spirit, 
sound health, and well-strung muscles, should 
attempt to hunt snipe. 

We have known, too, a life of indolence and a 
consequent disposition to become stout, to spoil 
more than one keen snipe shooter. But let a man 
not too much encumbered with infirmities of the 
flesh — ^by which we simply mean fat — carry with 
him to the marshes a fellow feeling foj snipe, in 
the inverse ratio to their wary and weird-like 
propensities, and the sport then compares with 
some other varieties presently to come under 
notice — as grouse shooting on the Scotch muirs, 
or deer stalking on the highlands, does with 
shooting under the escort of a game-keeper in the 
English preserves. 



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SNIPE SHOOTING. 53 

The remark is equally true of {he three ex- 
citing diversions, thsLt when one has enjoyed them 
to perfection, they are apt to give him a distaste 
for his other previously most cherished pursuits. 
In fact, we have found the prediction strongly 
manifested even by uneducated men of ordinary 
capacities, who have been reared in the vicinity 
of snipe grounds. 

" Hunting quail," said an old resident of the 
Neck, who had killed great numbers of snipe, 
partridges and woodcock in his day, " is like 
killing the stock on a man's farm ; but a snipe 
was made to be sprung and shot as certainly as 
a trigger was forged to be pulled."* 

* This old man has assured us, that he had often seen snipe rise 
from his meadows in dense flocks, like reed birds/ in September, 
and that previous to the invention of percussion locks, he and his 
brother had killed a market basket full in a few hours. 

He had shot snipe and woodcock in parts of the lower districts, 
now thickly populated, and lived to see the day when he was 
forced to complain, that he could hardly find a dozen reed birds in 
his owti fields. Even in his latter days he was a remarkable shot, 
discharging his piece almost at the instant on which the butt 
touched his shoulder, and most generally with decided effect. 

Though not much given to jocular remarks, he was wont to say, 
that his dog had such an opinion of his master's shooting, that he 
barely waited for the report before he sprang forward to retrieve 
the bird. Old Brazier was perfectly familiar with every rood of 
meadow or " mash" for miles and miles around, and wiU long be 
remembered in the Neck, for his skill as a shot and the energetic 
peculiarities of his disposition. 

4 



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54 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

Of all descriptions of dogs used in field shoot- 
ing, we unreservedly advance the opinion, that a 
swift thorough-going pointer or setter is, beyond 
dispute, the best for snipe. 

They know practically little of what they are 
writing about, who assert, in these latter days, 
that a slow dog is to be preferred in this species 
of sport. We grant that the assertion may hold 
good if intended to be applied to an old man, or 
a fair-weather sportsman ; and in that case we 
are not surprised, when carrying out the remark, 
some writers tell you, sotto voce, that perhaps 
you had better leave the dogs at home. We re- 
gard their advice, in this particular, pretty much 
as Dash or Czar would do, themselves, provided 
that they could comprehend the author were the 
last, with equal point and propriety, to advise 
them to beware of hunting too fast, lest they 
should over-heat their systems or founder their 
feet — that is to say, with a stare and a sniff. So 
far from admitting them to be sportsmen, we 
doubt if ever in their lives they "felt so much 
cold as over shoes in snow," and are inclined to 
conjecture that they must have been the veritable 
Cockneys, whose dogs, after witnessing a few of 
their exploits, left them, in unmitigated disgust, 
and went quietly home to resume their slumbers. 



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SNIPE SHOOTING. 55 

Apropos, we remember to have not long since 
seen, in out walk, an odd looking disciple of 
Nimrod, in a velvet cap, shooting-jacket, and 
horseman's boots, solemnly beating out a build- 
ing lot on Broad street, where a little water had 
accumulated after a rain — ^his face set and his 
piece at full cock — tramping backwards and 
forwards, now with the wind at his back, and 
now quartering — and evincing in these ma- 
noeuvres a precision and tenacity of purpose, 
which at first induced us to suspect that the 
man was mad ; until opportunely remembering 
the advice of these same closet shooters, and 
having a sincere respect for genius in the germ, 
we instantly withdrew our too curious gaze, and 
whistling to Dash, who was also regarding the 
embryo Nimrod with unaffected astonishment, 
walked hastily on. 

We* will hazard the opinion that this disciple, 
like his master, seldom found dogs of much ac- 
count in snipe shooting. 

But to resume — ^for the cars have passed the 
Lazaretto, It is not our wish to sit in judgment 
between the pointer and the setter, respecting the 
supposed superiority of either as snipe dogs. We 
have shot over so many excellent animals of both 
species, that, falling back on our sporting expe- 



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56 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

rience, it really seems invidious to institute a 
comparison. If required, however, to pronounce 
an opinion, we confess a slight preference for the 
pointer. 

Our partiality is grounded solely on his supe- 
rior steadiness and sagacity in the field, and the 
faculty which he sometimes displays of winding 
and leading directly on to snipe, from an asto- 
nishing distance. 

He is more staunch, and can be more fully de- 
pended upon at a much earlier age than the set- 
ter. When, however, a dog of the latter stock 
has arrived at the age of five or six years, and 
been regularly hunted every season, especially 
by one man, and that man a sportsman, he some- 
times becomes, so to speak, a very Napoleon 
among snipe dogs. 

All the fine qualities of the two stocks are con- 
centrated and perfected in him ; but such dogs 
are extremely rare. They are to be considered 
as the product of a combination of unusually fine 
instincts in the brute, brought out, tempered and 
perfected by the higher intelligence of the man. 

If your dog is experienced and staunch to his 
point, as, of course, he ought to be, the faster he 
hunts the better your prospect of finding birds. 
When he gets in among them, he will then be- 
come sufficiently steady. 



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SNIPE SHOOTING. 57 

As to his over-running birds, that is mere ba- 
gatelle. Snipe have not as yet been arraigned 
at the " Cedars" for wilfully withholding their 
scent. 

A good dog is still permitted to wind them at 
a safe distance. Their effluvia is still allowed to 
be strong, even by those wonder-hunting gentle- 
men, who, absorbed by one startUng idea, like 
the traveller who saw the calf's tail protruding 
through a knot-hole in the tan-yard fence, invoke 
the aid of clap-trap at once, disdaining to pay the 
least regard to any ordinary solution of the mys- 
tery. 

If, in the course of a day's sport, a few birds 
are prematurely and unavoidably flushed, the 
snipe shooter thinks no more of the matter, than 
a general, after a successful engagement, does of 
the casualties of the field. 

A disposition to range is characteristic of a 
high-bred animal ; and it is this quality, which, 
when united to staunchness and a knowledge of 
ground imbibed from successive seasons of field 
practice, mainly constitutes a snipe dog. 

The antiquated foolery about slow dogs, is 
only kept up by a set of scribblers, who, while 
cudgelling their brains to glorify American field 
sports, ever seem pathetically to lament their ex- 



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5S KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

elusion from the English preserves. These gen- 
tlemen, having been brought up to a tether, never 
forget their veneration for game laws and the 
majesty of a ring fence. Whether they are paid 
by London gun makers to puff their work on this 
side of the Atlantic, we know not; but one thing 
is certain, that if you read what they write, and 
believe, you will soon profess little faith in aught 
connected with sporting on this side of the water. 

As to their prosy and oft-repeated directions 
how to hunt snipe, in our humble opinion they 
are not worth a pinch of powder, except to fill a 
page or two of twaddle. It would really be some- 
thing new if any well-tutored dog could be pro- 
duced, who did not know more about the matter 
than gentlemen who affect to laud Ponto to the 
skies in one breath, and tell you that he is not 
worth the trouble of taking out to the field in the 
next. 

But, allons ! The cars have stopped, and as 
soon as possible we must be afloat. After some 
delay, a boat and two stout oarsmen were pro- 
cured ; the dogs, inured to all sorts of locomotion, 
tumbled in and stowed themselves away in the 
stern-sheets, as peacefally as lambs; and with 
the tide swelling fast to flood, we pushed off for 
the opposite shore. 



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SNIPE SHOOTING. 59 

Considerable time was consumed in making a 
passage, as the river was filled with floating ice, 
and is here, at least, twice its width at Philadel- 
phia ; but thanks to the skill and sinewy arms 
of the boatmen this was at last effected, without 
shipping more water than was agreeable, except 
to the dogs, who, however, bore the infliction with 
exemplary patience. 

Old Pierson, who had been watching the boat 
with a glass from the balcony, met us on the pier, 
in spite of his rheumatic limp, and in a few mo- 
ments we were busily engaged in shifting in our 
old comfortable room, facing the river. 

A lunch was ready for us when we descended 
in sporting trim ; but, although an hour and a 
half amongst the ice had sharpened our appe- 
tites, we paid but brief attention to the repast, 
and under the auspices of our good-natured host 
speedily set off", directing our course down to a 
well-known meadow back of the first cove below 
the pier. 

The day was all we could ask ; the sun about 
midway in his course ; the sky blue and clear, 
with streaks of haze — which foretold a change — 
slowly spreading in the north-east ; but feeling 
tolerably sure of a half day's sport on the twenty- 
first day of February, we blessed our auspicious 
stars and strode rapidly on. 



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60 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

The place for which we were pushing was a 
low, marshy meadow, partly covered with rushes, 
and lying in a sort of winding nook between the 
Salem road and the river bank, outside of which 
was a tide-water flat, where birds are often found 
feeding in April on a calm day. The meadow 
was traversed by a run of some size, and some 
''apprehensions had been expressed by T. of its 
proving too wet, although Pierson had assured 
us that the snow had been off the ground so long 
that it was now in excellent order for snipe. It 
was easy to see by the state of the ground over 
which we passed, in making a short cut to avoid 
a turn in the bank, that the vdnd and the sun 
had been unusually active in the process of eva- 
poration, for the season of the year, though we 
looked in vain for the fishermen from whom our 
host had derived his information ; the sheds be- 
hind the bank, where they are almost alw^iys to 
be found mending their gill-nets in the first of 
the season, being now apparently deserted. 

The tide was up over the flat, and as we halted 
a moment on the bank and looked inland, it was 
plain that if birds were to be found at all, it was 
on the meadow before us. After reconnoitering 
an instant, we crossed the ditch and separated. 

A gentle breeze was blowing from the south- 



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SNIPE SHOOTING. 61 

west directly athwart our course, and Dash, our 
friend's setter, taking it in his nostrils, com- 
menced to quarter his ground at a fast gallop, 
edging more and more in the wind, while Czar, 
after casting a jealous glance at the other's mo- 
tions, drew up in his track and threw his nose 
high, snuffing the air; then advancing a few 
yards, he looked around to catch our eye, and led 
straight at a half crouch, as was his habit when 
winding on a strong scent. 

We had watched his motions from the moment 
we rose to the bank, and working leisurely up, 
now felt sure that birds were within a few hun- 
dred feet of us, as we could actually see them 
feeding and flitting up on the meadow. 

In this way, taking no notice whatever of a 
shot from T. at an outlying bird, he continued on 
towards the bend of the meadow, and crossing 
the run at the old spot, halted and stood firm to 
his point on the very edge of the rushes, which 
covered about two acres of ground. 

We waved our hand to T., who was up in a 
moment, and for a single portentous instant, we 
both paused, gazing with admiring eyes at the 
striking picture before us. 

The attitude of the dogs, each as he stood like 
stone, was intensely apprehensive and life-like. 



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G2 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

The pointer — as was his wont when close on 
his game — stood with one foot raised and his 
body half bent, the loose skin on his forehead 
corrugated into what we are wont to call an in- 
fallible wrinkle, beneath which his large, full 
eyes were immovably fixed on the rushes before 
him, with a stare half knostic, half grim, like that 
of a priest on his tripod about to announce to 
some trembling expectant the shadows of a pre- 
destined doom. 

The setter was a few paces behind, equally 
firm in his posture, though his gaze was more 
inquisitive and less concentrated, and he held his 
head higher, as if looking over the pointer's stern. 
They did not appear to breathe ; not a muscle of 
their bodies moved ; the withered herbage rustled 
softly in the wind, which played with the long 
winter feathers of the rough dog's coat, but no 
stone bastion could have been steadier, and the 
very lines of his jowls were as fixed and deter- 
minate, as the circumvallations round the ram- 
part of some bristling fortress. 

Simultaneously we made two strides into the 
low cover; not a feather showed itself; a step 
farther, and, uttering their peculiar alarm notes, 
six or seven snipe sprung within as many feet of 
us, and darted in crooked lines up the meadow; 



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SNIPE SHOOTING. 63 

the reports instantly followed ; the dogs dropped, 
and in this way, alternately flushing and firing, 
we beat out the rushes, and drove the remaining 
birds into the range of meadow below. 

Language could scarcely describe the admira- 
ble steadiness with which the dogs moved over 
this first portion of the ground. No two veteran 
scouts, suspicious of an ambuscade, could have 
shown greater wariness in the heart of an ene- 
my's country. 

They trailed through the rustling rushes as 
gingerly as if they were treading among circum- 
ambient steel-traps. 

No new casualty in flushing or falling, no 
proximity to living or dead birds, could draw 
them an inch farther than prudence warranted. In 
one instance, while Czar was on a point, a bird was 
killed which fell plump on the old fellow's head, 
without discomposing his equanimity in the least. 
T. declared that he never winked. A few minutes 
afterwards, from some peculiar movement of the 
game, he became wedged, as it were, between 
two snipe, and we never shall forget the sudden- 
ness with which he dropped, the wary, wide- 
awake look of his red muzzle, as he flattened his 
jowls down on the moist earth, nor the cool, saga- 
cious air with which he rose on his legs, when 



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64 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

he heard the click of the capped gun-locks, after 
the birds had been flushed and killed. 

We now proceeded to the lower meadows, over 
which the birds had scattered, and the excellence 
of the dogs in finding the game, now spread over 
a wide extent of country, was very apparent. 

The superior swiftness of the setter gave him 
at first some advantage ; but after reaching the 
improved pasture grounds still further down, 
where the earth was drier, the sagacity which 
Czar showed in avoiding wide, circling and ex- 
cursive ranges, and the faculty which he seemed 
to possess of piloting the shooter directly to the 
moist spots where the birds lay, gave him in the 
end fall as many points. 

Upon comparing notes at sundown we found 
that, as usual, neither of us could boast of having 
greatly exceeded the other in the number of shots 
bagged, which amounted in all to thirty-six 
brace.* 

The birds were small and thin, but they laid 



* Early in the spring the birds frequent wet stubble-fields in 
sheltered situations, a few miles inland from the great water 
courses, and we have often killed numbers of them in such locali- 
ties, when very few were to be found upon the meadows. No 
doubt the worms work nearer to the surface in low, cultivated 
grounds, than upon the broad, exposed surface of meadow land. 



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SNIPE SHOOTING. 65 

close to the dogs, and flew well, and, every thing 
considered, we seldom enjoyed greater diversion 
on many subsequent visits to these and other 
localities. That night the Avind shifted to the 
eastward, and we reached Philadelphia at one 
o'clock the next day, in the midst of a furious 
snow storm. This was the first and last snipe 
shootiiig we had in the month of February.* 

Within the last few years these grounds, as 
well as others above and below, on either side of 
the Delaware, have been greatly improved. Ex- 
tensive marshes have been drained ; sterile mea- 
dows thrown open to the tides and afterwards 
banked in, so that year after year there is even 
less certainty than before of finding snipe. Stilly 
diversion is to be had by those who know the 
grounds and study the weather, along Oldman's, 
Salem and AUoway's creeks, on the New Jersey 
side, the marshes of Newport, Staunton, New 



* We have long noticed that when the nights are cool, with high 
w\nds from the north-west, towards the latter end of March, very 
few birds are to be found on the marshes. The prevalence of 
southerly winds and a hazy sky, with drizzling rain, is much more 
favorable to their migration northward. The same remark holds 
good in reference to the appearance of shad in the Delaware. In- 
deed, snipe are called shad-birds by many of the fishermen, and the 
abundance or scarcity of the one is considered highly indicative of 
that of the other. 



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66 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

Castle, Delaware City, Port Penn, and upon the 
grounds on Appoquinaminky and Blackbird 
creeks, on the Delaware side. 

It is, however, now more necessary, if possible, 
than before, that a snipe dog, to be up to his 
work, should be perfectly steady, and possess at 
the same time considerable power of range. 

While the passion for field sports is largely on 
the increase with us, agriculturists are improving 
their lands on the great water courses, and mar- 
ket shooters striving to be in advance of the 
sportsman on all the choice grounds ; so that the 
chances are, that, unless you go farther and spend 
more time on your excursions, you will hardly 
get your share of snipe shooting. 

How different was the case in the days of our 
fathers, and even within the memory of our own ! 
Who then would have thought of going thirty or 
forty miles from home to kill snipe ? 

They were then particularly abundant in "the 
Neck," on the marshes of the Schuylkill, and 
along all the lesser tributaries of the Delaware.^ 

The shooter was then sure of finding sport on 
Sheer's or Girard's meadows, in the vicinity of 
the " Broad Marsh," and almost at any point be- 
tween the Navy Yard and the Lazaretto, includ- 
ing the drifts and low islands along the Pennsyl- 



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SNIPE SHOOTING. 67 

vania shore. On the New Jersey side, Kaighn's 
Point meadows, and those upon the Newtown 
Creek, were accounted good snipe grounds. Red- 
field's flat, at the mouth of Timber Creek, and 
low lands of Josiah Ward, lying several miles 
higher up the stream, were specially famous. 

On Eagle Point meadows snipe have been seen 
in immense flights, and the marshes of Wood- 
bury and Mantua creeks were also celebrated. 
Wilson's grounds, situated on the latter stream, 
and consisting of low tussocky pasturage, trod- 
den up by cattle and kept sufficiently moist by 
the spring rains, were much visited by sports- 
men. 

Clemmell and Raccoon creeks, and Raccoon 
island, have also been in great esteem in their 
day. On the range of meadows from Bridge- 
port, New Jersey, down to Oldman's Creek, and 
on all the grounds between Pennsgrove and Sa- 
lem Creek, birds are still to be found from the 
twentieth of March until the last of April. We 
once killed twenty brace of very fine snipe at 
Pennsgrove as late as the fourth of May, and in 
March last bagged eighty-eight birds in two 
days' shooting in the same vicinity. We repeat, 
however, that these, as well as the most noted 
grounds on the opposite shore, have been so 



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68 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

drained of late years, that \inless you have some 
acquaintance with the best localities, and are 
able to stand rough weather,* hard work, and 
often chagrin, to boot, you had better extend 
your excursions. 

At Bridgeton, New Jersey, there are an 
abundance of snipe, both in the spring and fall; 
you will also have sport at Bombay Hook ; but 
in the neighborhood of Dennisville, New Jer- 
sey, are the best and most extensive snipe 
grounds that we have any knowledge of. 

We would advise the young shooter, if he has 
a week to spare, to go there by all means. If 

* We were shooting, in March, on the river meadows between 
Pennsgroye and Craven's Ferry, daring a gale from the south-east, 
when an extraordinary high tide suddenly swept away about fifty 
feet of the bank, through which the water came roaring in so fast 
that the dogs were swimming round us, and we were actually up to 
our waists before we could reach the fast land. The meadows were 
submerged for miles, and numbers of sheep and hogs drowned, the 
carcasses of which lay scattered about, while we were killing snipe 
at low water over portions of the same ground on the next day. 

On another occasion, in Robinson's meadows, on Salem Creek, 
having found birds plentiful but very wild, we at last succeeded in 
driving them across a ditch into a cat-tail swamp, where we had 
them at advantage, inasmuch as the cover being high, they were 
inclined to lie close. In the midst of our sport the tide stole a 
march upon us, and we were forced to give over shooting and wade 
the ditch, which we had previously crossed without much dif- 
ficulty. 



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SNIPE SHOOTING. 69 

the journey is somewhat long and tiresome, he 
is at least certain, at its end, to find the grounds 
free from market shooters, who, wherever they 
go, tend to prejudice the country people against 
ail strangers from the city. These fellows, in 
general, regard the sportsman with an evil eye, 
and unless closely watched are apt to play him 
some trick. 

There is a tolerable good house kept by 

Wills, at the upper end of the village, and the 
host is fond of going out with his guests. 

The proper times to start are about the mid- 
dle of March, or the last of October in the 
fall. 

At Frenchtown, Maryland, there are good 
snipe grounds, but their extent is comparatively 
small, and the sjiort is over in a few hours. Still, 
if you have the advantage of pilotage, and are 
on the spot early enough in the season — as snipe 
seldom remain here long in spring, preferring 
to follow the course of rivers where the tides 
ebb and flow — you may sometimes have a suffi- 
ciency of sport.* 

* At this place Mr. Erider has seen five snipe feeding on one 
spot, within ten feet of the road-side. Had he been disposed, and 
not too agreeably occupied with watching the ease and dispatch 
with which they bored the ground with their long bills, the dex- 

5 



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70 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

We have nothing to say here in reference to 
the kind of gun to be used in snipe shooting ; 
this is left to the choice of the shooter. 

As to the apparel most suitable for traversing 
the drifts and marshes, it would be well to re- 
member that there is a water-proof boot made 
by a few Philadelphia artizans, which for light- 
ness and durability exceeds any work of the 
kind which we have ever used. They should 
be made large enough to admit two pairs of 
stockings— one pair made of lamb's wool to be 
worn next to the skin. You will find the ad- 
vantage of this, when riding home nine or ten 
miles, after your day's hunt. 

Snipe are found in almost every quarter of the 
globe. The editor has seen them exposed for 
sale alive in the market at Canton, China, and 
killed them in the marshes of the bay of Santa 
Catherina, on the southern coast of Brazil. 



terity with which they drew out and swallowed the worms, and the 
quantity which they caught and devoured in the space of a few 
minutes, he might readily have killed them all at one discharge. 
They kept so close together, were so busily intent on their opera- 
tions, that, to an imaginatiye mind, they might have recalled the 
fictitious image of so many gnomes in a mine. 

After he had observed them for some minutes, they silently flew 
and alit a few yards farther off, where the inequalities of the sur- 
face of the ground effectually hid them from view. 



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SNIPE SHOOTING. 71 

The rice fields of Egypt swarm with them in 
winter ; they are found in Java and Sumatra, 
and almost all the islands of the Indian sea. 

In Madagascar they are abundant ; also in 
Ceylon and Japan ; they have been killed in 
great numbers at the Falkland Islands, and 
other stormy and desolate solitudes of the south- 
ern Atlantic. 

They are common in the Arctic regions of 
Siberia, and in every part of the old continent. 

In North America, they are said to be abund- 
ant in the golden regions of the Pacific, and are 
found every where in the United States. 

They afford sport to the citizens of New Or- 
leans and Mobile, and are known all along the 
course of " the great father of waters." 

With few exceptions, they breed far to the 
north, and in Canada, we believe, are only shot 
in the fall, before they begin to move off to their 
winter home in the south. 

Snipe are often found in very wet situations. 
We have sometimes flushed them late in the 
spring from low meadows in the interior of the 
state, which were so covered with water that the 
ends of the blades of grass just appeared on the 
surface. 

Notwithstanding their wandering and way- 



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72 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

ward nature, they soon become accustomed to 
captivity. We once kept one of these birds 
several weeks in company with a yellow shanked 
snipe. ( Scohpaz Flavipedes, ) 



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WOODCOCK SHOOTING. 

THE WOODCOCK— SCOLOPAX MINOR. 

Description. — '*The male woodcock is ten 
inches and a half long, and sixteen inches in ex- 
tent ; bill a brownish flesh color, black towards 
the tip, the upper mandible ending in a slight 
knob, that projects about one-tenth of an inch 
beyond the lower, each grooved, and, in length, 
somewhat more than two inches and a half; 
forehead, line over the eyes, and whole lower 
parts reddish tawny ; sides of the neck, inclining 
to ash ; between the eye and bill, a slight streak 
of dark brown ; crown, from the fore part of the 
eye backwards, black, crossed by three narrow 
bands of brownish white ; cheeks, marked with 
a bar of black, variegated with light brown ; 
edges of the back, and of the scapulars, pale 
bluish white ; back and scapulars, deep black, 
each feather tipped or marbled with light brown 
and bright ferruginous, with numerous fine zig- 
zag lines of black crossing the lighter part; 
quills, plain dusky brown; tail, black, each 



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74 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

feather marked along the outer edge with small 
spots of pale brown, and ending in narrow tips, 
of a pale drab color above, and silvery white be- 
low ; lining of the wing, bright rust ; legs and 
feet, a pale reddish flesh coloi* ; eye, very full 
and black, seated high and very far back in the 
head ; weight, five ounces and a half, sometimes 
six. 

" The female is twelve inches long, and eigh- 
teen in extent ; weighs eight ounces ; and differs 
also in having the bill very near three inches in 
length ; the black on the head is not quite so 
intense; and the sides under the wings are 
slightly barred with dusky." 

The Breeding Grounds. — You are in the 
country in the month of March, and chance to 
be standing on an eminence in front of a low 
meadow, flanked by a wood. 

Although the weather has been mild for the 
season, yet something in the prospect before 
you, grounded upon the experience of the past, 
inclines you to think the winter is not yet over. 

The snows no longer whiten the valley; the 
stream has burst from its icy bounds ; but the 
tyrant king of the north is not yet dethroned, 
and the face of nature still wears an aspect of 
austere and desolate gloom. No songster's note 



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WOODCOCK SHOOTING, i ' : : , 75 

is heard, save the single melancholy call' of the 
blue-bird,* borne from afar on the rising blast, 
which, as it rattles the naked boughs overhead, 
or whirls the dead leaves at your feet, imparts 
even a touch of menace to the sere look of the 
scene. 

Perhaps while reflecting on the changes of 
season, you are insensibly led to dwell on a ver- 
dure which nought can restore ; or it may be 
you are in that dreamy, short-lived mood which 
is so apt to enfold a man's inmost spirit as he 
watches day-light darken in the sky ; while the 
old farmer, whose progenitors, for four genera- 
tions, have lived and died on the place, halts at 
your side, internally wondering what it is that 
you see in the west, where the sun has just sunk 
in your sight, behind some distant hill. 

Suddenly you hear a discordant cry, and ob- 
serve a bird which has just risen from the low 



* This call or plaint, which is the bird's common note when 
migrating in autumn, is also heard early in the spring, when a 
recurrence of wintry weather drives it back to the south, from 
whence too early it came. 

The note is generally uttered high in the air, and has a very dif- 
ferent effect upon the ear from the soft and delicate warble with 
which every lover of spring is familiar, and which, when heard 
amid the fragrance of May, would seem the very outpourings of a 
gratulatory and innocent joy. 



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76 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

grounds before you, rapidly scaling the air by a 
series of short, spiral evolutions, until it has 
attained a height equal, perhaps, to that of a tall 
poplar in the vicinity ; then sailing to and fro 
in a slow, devious circuit, it seems to survey the 
meadow beneath, while a low, murmuring sound, 
which has something questful in its cadence, 
drops, as it were, on your ear from the twilight 
sky ; listening to this, you again hear a sharp, 
impatient "^a-a-cA:," and see the bird shoot di- 
rectly down close to the spot from whence it 
arose, again uttering its last, harsh, guttural cry 
as it touches the ground. 

This singular flight is repeated twice or thrice, 
at short intervals, the harsh note on the ground 
becoming each time more significant and dis- 
tinct. It is the love-call of the male ; the spiral 
ascent and subsequent motions in the air are 
the bird's mode of wooing ; and you may be sure 
that the female is coquettishly lurking in the 
grass close by, or, perhaps, running, with droop- 
ing wings, to meet her destined mate as he de- 
scends. 

"Do you know what bird that is?" your 
attendant asks, pointing toward the meadow with 
his unshorn chin. 

" Certainly," you reply ; " it is a woodcock." 



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WOODCOCK SHOOTING. 77 

** Nay," says old Barleycorn, smiling at your 
fancied ignorance, " it is a hushschnip. I haven't 
sawn a woodcock on these lands since I were a 
boy." • 

You are only at odds about names, however, 
the farmer fancying that you spoke of the great 
pileated woodpecker, once common in the forests 
of Montgomery, and, with its kingly congener, 
the ivory-billed, long ago so admirably described 
by Wilson ; while you, perhaps, are almost as 
far led astray by the quaint but appropriate 
title, which he bestows upon the bird in ques- 
tion, and by which it was always distinguished 
in the primitive days of his fathers. 

As soon as you are set right again, he will 
tell you that he has seen as many as five or six 
woodcocks engaged in these serial courtships, in 
the morning and evening twilight, at this season 
of the year, making a curious medley of sounds 
which, perhaps, he will describe as a mingled 
quacking and whooping, loud enough to be dis- 
tinctly audible on his porch, at least a hundred 
yards distant from the meadow. On one occa- 
sion, while he was standing at the fence, one 
bird descended so close to another already on 
the ground, that he saw them engage in a du- 
etto, which lasted for several moments. They 



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78 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

tilted and tugged with their long bills, and flap- 
ped each other with their wings, their tail- 
feathers stiffly erected and their plumage in- 
verted, until the spectator, a conscientious mem- 
ber of a society religiously opposed to all 
species of combats, save those of flesh and spirit, 
stepped from his place of concealment and put 
both belligerents to flight. 

A few evenings after this conversation, wea- 
rying of your book or your pen, you look out from 
your window upon the tranquil face of night. 
It is a calm, clear evening ; you can just hear 
the roar of the distant dam, and looking toward 
the quiet meadow, see the run gleaming in the 
moonlight, with the poplar's tall top, rising 
straight and still as a steeple's spire, above the 
the dark belt of woods on the back ground. 

Beyond that wood is the old Dunker grave- 
yard, where several members of the farmer's 
family are interred ; you cannot see their tomb- 
stones, but you know they are there, shining 
white and still in the cold moonbeam : you look 
aloft, where the stars are burning, and, perhaps, 
some serious misgivings of the lonely life you 
are leading — some true notion of the vanity of 
your earthly aims comes over you, as you think 
of that cluster of graves before those steadfast, 
far away lights. 



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WOODCOCK SHOOTING. 79 

At that inexplicable instant, even while your 
mind is oppressed with its new feeling, tlie voice 
of old Barleycorn is heard loudly calling for 
you to come down. Accordingly, down you go ; 
and before you are up to what he is after, he 
carries you out on the porch and bids you listen. 
For a few moments you distinguish nothing but 
the hoarse bay of some neighbor's farm dog, 
echoed back by your pointer in the stable, and 
the subdued, familiar roar of the rushing wa- 
ters ; but old Truepenny, who knows what he 
is about, lays his hand on your arm, and then, 
for the first time in your life, you hear those 
mysterious and much-disputed notes, which 
Nuttall and one or two others have described so 
well. 

Your hat and storm-jacket are on, and the old 
man, omnipresent, leads you down to the low 
grounds, where, careless of agues, he hides you 
under an alder bush, and both remain quiet as 
death. 

Presently the woodcock's loud quack strikes 
your ear, apparently within a few yards ; the 
farmer points in the air ; you catch a fleeting 
glimpse of the bird as he mounts, and at the 
same moment hear a low, hurried, quavering 
hum, which seems like an imperfect attempt at 



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80 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

the preluding of a song ; this dies away in the 
air over head, and in an instant after is suc- 
ceeded by a loud, distinct melody, so earnestly 
emitted, and of such rapid continuance, as to 
resemble the musical gushing of water, or the 
reedy notes of a sylvan pipe, in which some 
wayward urchin is blowing. It is, however, the 
strains from a feathered songster's throat, and 
becomes more clear and sweet the lower it 
hovers in the air around ; until ceasing abruptly 
it is followed by the usual '^pa-a-ck,' uttered in 
a much lower key than before, and with a half 
choking but curious emphasis, as if addressed 
in appeal to some object near. 

If you choose to remain at your post for an 
hour or more, you may hear the serenade con- 
tinued in this way with but little remission, and 
even see the bird on the ground within a few 
feet of you, its tail-feathers erected, and body 
stiffly set on its legs, as with a ludicrous and 
inimitable appearance of conceit it jerks out the 
strange finale to its song. 

The old man assures you, on returning to the 
house, that the hen is close by, and that the eve- 
ning performance, which appears so unique and 
interesting to you, is literally an old song with 
him. 



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WOODCOCK SHOOTING. 81 

A week or two later in the season, you chance 
to be crossing the fields, on your way to the 
village post-office, perhaps, with some four- 
footed companion of your sports composedly 
coursing your heels. You are passing along the 
skirt of. a wood ; it is a balmy April day ; the 
wind is fresh from the south, and you seem to 
scent the odor of early violets afar oflF, as cloud 
after cloud flits through the blue air : you hear 
the short familiar notes of the song-sparrow, ear- 
liest and sweetest warbler of his tribe, and in- 
stead of feeling poetically inclined, ten chances 
to one that you are thinking on another visit to 
the snipe grounds. If so, mechanically turning 
your head, you glance back at your familiar, 
and lo ! as if living in your very thoughts, your 
familiar is " at a stand." 

There is a knostic yet half quizzical look in- 
volved in the wrinkles in the old Trojan's por- 
tentous face, which makes you think that he 
has a tom-cat or a stray fowl skulking in the 
bush ; and feeling a slight flutter of expectancy 
yourself, bending low, you peer curiously about, 
until suddenly, as by a flash, your gaze is ar- 
rested at once, and little fairy, fairy bubbles 
float up, as it werei from your heart to your eyes, 
as amid the thin, dry herbage at the roots of a 



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82 KRIDBR'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

bush, or a decayed stump, you see, within reach 
of your hand, the woodcock brooding on her 
nest. 

By Jove ! here is a discovery. You almost 
feel as if you had stumbled upon one of nature's 
inscrutible secrets. 

The old pointer is as steady as a statue ; the 
wild bird seems wonderfully tame ; there is no 
need to speak or to stir ; you may sit and gaze 
your fill on that solitary spot. 

What a rare and exquisite proof of the triumph 
of maternal instinct is here ! 

How innocently calm — how replete with pa- 
tient tranquillity, the large black eyes meet your 
eager gaze — how quiet the wild thing sits, every 
dusky brown quill and marbled feather in its 
place, and the long, grooved bill resting on the 
breast ! 

So full of abiding trust is the creature's cra- 
dled look, that, lost in admiration at her appa- 
parent unconcern, you scarcely think of the 
eggs concealed in the nest beneath. It is as if 
she had assumed that artless, unshrinking air 
on purpose to beguile you of the treasures, 
which, day and night, she so sedulously guards. 
You may even put forth your hand and touch 
her wing, and she will not shrink ; but if by any 



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WOODCOCK SHOOTING. 83 

species of subtlety you could place your finger 
on the breast where the plumage is worn from 
the skin, you might then feel a mother's heart 
beating hurriedly within, in spite of the seat 
maintaine'd, the tranquil eyes, the composed and 
unruffled plumes.* 

So unstudied is the nest, composed as it is of 
a dozen stalks of grass and a few withered leaves, 
so fearless and full of faith to the end the atti- 
tude of the bird, that it is long before you can 
withdraw your eyes from the sight. 

From how many hundred leagues in the far 
south has the woodcock flown, to hatch her 
brood at last in that chosen spot! For how 
many days and nights by that old grey stump — 
in sun, in wind and in rain — through how many 
dangers past — has she kept her post! How 
often has that little heart throbbed with fear as 
the hawk stole by on her hungry flight, or the 
stealthy fox on his midnight prowl ! How often 
have the winds beat and the floods came, and 
the house built by the stump withstood the 



* We attempted to remove the eggs from under a sitting wood- 
cock, when, uttering a sort of soft murmur, she fluttered off to a 
little distance, and remained watching our motions with evident 
anxiety. We replaced them and turned away ; she then returned 
to the nest, and soon after hatched her brood. 



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84 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

shock! And who so sure of his own sympa- 
thies, as to make mock of the instinct, which, 
until the end is wrought, mysteriously binds the 
wing that has flown so far, to this charmed atom 
of ground. 

Now, call oflF your dog and go your way, 
humbled like a child before the smallest mystery 
of creation, yet devising, as you distinctively 
glance at the trees, what should be done with 
the market shooter, who, for the sake of the extra 
shilling which game brings out of season, would 
kill this bird on her nest. 

Whether the female solely performs the duties 
of incubation, or is assisted by the male, is not 
for you to determine. Come to the spot at any 
hour of the day which you please — sit there 
from sunrise until dark, you will always find 
the same bird on the nest, and while you are on 
the watch she will not stir. It is true the mark- 
ings of both sexes are the same, with a very tri- 
fling difference, and both birds have the same 
peculiar and somewhat bizarre look, imparted by 
the long bill, the large and singularly shaped 
skull, and the brilliant black eyes set high and 
far back in the head. Nevertheless, you may 
readily distinguish the sex by the greater size of 
the bird before you, the superior length of the 



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WOODCOCK SHOOTING. 85 

bill, as well as the black tint on the back being 
less intense. 

But although you have not been able to de- 
tect this fact, and cannot give a decided opinion, 
yet reasoning from analogy, and from the circum- 
stance of the male bird having been seen in 
close proximity, it is fair to infer that while the 
hen is abroad in search of food, more especially 
at night, her partner takes her place. 

There is good reason to suppose, however, 
that her absence is but short, barely long enough 
to satisfy the cravings of nature, and that she is 
by far the greater portion of the time on the 
nest. 

A little later in the season you are walking in 
the same woods. In a mossy and moist spot, 
shaded by the boughs of some gigantic tree, a 
bird suddenly flutters up and falls within a few 
feet to the right or left of your path. It is your 
woodcock; but never heed her now; be not 
duped by her innocent stratagems ; bid Ponto 
come to a "down charge;" step carefully over 
the ground in every direction but that in which 
the pretended cripple would lead you : sharpen 
your eyes until you seem to see like a fly : aha ! 
you have them now ; the rogues have chipped 
the shell; one, two, three; and see, covered like 
6 



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86 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

the rest, with a brownish white down of the 
same hue as the withered leaf on which it skulks, 
see here is the fourth. If you lift them gently 
in your hand, listen to their feeble ''peep! 
peep r touch their tender bills, and watch how 
shrewdly each tiny urchin toddles off to hide 
behind the tendrils of a surface root, or an empty 
tortoise shell, you might almost take them for 
the children of the fabled Mossmen. 

And yet so helpless do they seem in that soli- 
tary range of forest, that it appears almost a mi- 
racle they do not fall a prey to the snake, the 
raccoon, the opossum, and other voracious 
prowlers of the night. But though feeble, they 
grow fast, and the same maternal care which 
kept its vigil so long on the nest, is now equally 
provident to supply and preserve the callow 
brood. 

A month later yon are abroad again ; Ponto is 
inclined to range out, and you to permit him ; 
at length, after a little preliminary scouting, he 
either draws up at the side of a rivulet, or, per- 
haps, as if struck by a sudden reminiscence, 
goes straight up to the foot of the great tree on 
the same sombre spot, where the earth beneath 
the dead leaves is still wet, although the ponds 
and marshy nooks of the wood are beginning to 



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WOODCOCK SHOOTING. 87 

dry. As you approach, up spring the same brood, 
now well feathered and strong, and darting 
among the trees, pitch severally behind a bush, 
run a few yards farther and skulk. 

The two old birds are frequently found in 
company, and here the whole family remain until 
the increasing drought of summer drives them 
down to the shores of our large rivers, and the 
'* cripple shooting," as it is not inappropriately 
called, begins. 

When Frank Forrester, who sometimes belies 
his nom de plume^ tells you that the woodcock 
regularly rears two broods in a season, he speaks 
knowingly that which he knows not of. 

We have lived for years in a part of the state 
of Pennsylvania, where cocks have bred within 
the memory of man, and we have paid great at- 
tention to their habits, which are sufficiently 
curious and interesting, albeit involved in such 
obscurity that it behooves him who speaks of them 
to weigh his words. In common with others 
who have observed them as closely as their reti- 
ring nature would permit, we are inclined to the 
opinion that their nests are seldom seen in Penn- 
sylvania before the fourth of April ; the period of 
incubation is universally admitted to be twenty- 
one days, which, allowing a month for the growth 



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83 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

of the young birds, will bring them far into May 
before they are fully fledged. 

It is true that nests have been found in March, 
and it is said even in February ; but these cases, 
like the late broods in June, are merely excep- 
tions to the general law, and are dependent upon 
accidental circumstances. 

The idea of the hen turning over the tender 
brood to the care of the male, while she proceeds 
to incubate a second time, is not susceptible of 
proof, is opposed to the belief of the best ornitho- 
logists of the country, and even to the known in- 
stinct of the bird. In our opinion, it is one of 
those strokes of the pen intended to startle by its 
boldness, when the author is really as much in 
the dark on the subject as his readers. 

In the forests of Montgomery, Berks and 
Northampton counties, we have repeatedly found 
them feeding in detached, broods — two, three or 
four young birds, fully fledged, in company with 
the two old ones — near the last of May, and in 
the months of June and July, if the season be wet. 
When you first approach these insulated, marshy 
spots, the birds lie close, and if you are so disposed, 
as the woods are pretty open and free from brush, 
you may easily make a double shot when they 
spring. After that it is useless to mark down 



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WOODCOCK SHOOTING. 89 

the remaining birds, as they seldom admit the dog 
to point them a second time while under the in- 
fluence of thieir first fears. 

Pass on until you come to another piece of wet 
ground, when ten chances to one your dog points 
again, and another brood springs. It is absurd 
for writers to tell you that young cocks in July 
are only half-fledged, and may be knocked down 
with a pole. When flushed on the breeding 
ground, their first flight, though seldom pro- 
tracted beyond one hundred yards, is sufficiently 
agile and vigorous to puzzle aught but a good 
shot to bring both birds down; indeed, we have 
known a young cock, refusing to lie a second 
time to the dog, to fly entirely through a piece of 
wood containing many acres, and take refuge at 
last in the middle of a rye-field. 

Indeed, if for the purpose of observation and 
inquiry, you traverse the woods at this period, 
you will be fully satisfied of the power of their 
flight, by watching the rapid and dexterous man- 
Xier in which they dart among the surrounding 
tree trunks, very different from the lazy, listless 
way in which the old birds flap over a meadow 
in the glare of day. 

In making these remarks we would by no 
means be understood to countenance cock shoot- 
ing at this season of the year. 



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90 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

When thus harassed, the birds leave the woods 
and seek other quarters in the succeeding spring. 
They formerly bred abundantly in Haycock 
township, Bucks county; but some foolish fellow 
from Bethlehem, having laid a wager that he 
could kill a hundred birds in a day, in accom- 
plishing this murderous feat, made cocks ex- 
tremely scarce in this district for several succes- 
sive seasons. We were told by an innkeeper on 
the old Bethlehem road, that he saw this man 
count out ninety-six woodcock on his bar-room 
floor. 

That they are much more abundantly diffused 
over the country, than their peculiar habits lead 
the inhabitants to suppose, there is no manner of 
doubt. Mr. Krider remembers well an old far- 
mer residing near Moorestown, New Jersey, who, 
accidentally flushing cocks in his woods, pro- 
cured a quantity of powder and shot, and being 
somewhat conversant in the art of pulling a trig- 
ger, in one day killed an almost incredible num- 
ber, which he carried to the Philadelphia market, 
to the great astonishment of the hucksters. 

The birds were in the habit of breeding in the 
same woods, and the old fellow, well satisfied 
with his day's work, has been on the lookout for 
the long bills ever since; and it concerns us to 
state, to but little purpose. 



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WOODCOCK SHOOTING. 91 

In the summer of 1844, while visiting the 
breeding grounds, in company with a young 
friend, he unfortunately shot a hen-bird, while 
engaged in performing those little interesting 
manoeuvres by which she hoped to decoy our 
steps from the vicinity of her unfledged young. 
The brood, consisting of four half-grown birds, 
were preserved and carried to the farm-house, 
where two of them were accidentally killed the 
same night. A box was procured, the bottom 
strewn with soft earth and dead leaves, strips 
nailed across to prevent the birds from escaping, 
and the next morning they were placed in their 
new abode. Being very wild and their bills 
tender, great care was required in feeding them, 
and it was necessary to cover the slats to prevent 
them from injuring themselves by fluttering up 
against the top of the box. The mode of forcing 
them to feed which we at first adopted, was to 
take them out of the box, open the bill and place 
the worm athwart, when, after a few ineffectual 
attempts, the birds took them down. 

This plan succeeded well for a few days, when, 
to our suprise and gratification, one bird readily 
took his food from our fingers, and soon became 
so tame as to require no further handling. The 
other fellow continued as wild as before, and after 



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92 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

giving US a great deal of trouble, when nearly 
full-grown accidentally received a tap on the 
head with a finger, which, to our unfeigned re- 
gret, killed it on the spot. 

We have no objections to state, notwithstand- 
ing the sympathy of Dr. Lev^s for young cocks, 
that, ogre-like, we did eat this bird without any 
remorse of conscience, and found it very tender 
and juicy. 

The other bird did not appear to miss his wild 
brother; perhaps, like bipeds without feathers, 
he consoled his grief with the substantial reflec- 
tion that he would now have the box and all the 
larvae to himself But this is scandal, for instead 
of becoming proud and politic, he grew more gen- 
tle and tame from day to day, and the reader has 
no idea as he increased in grace how he gained 
upon our affection. In truth, to speak without 
quirk or quibble, we fairly loved that woodcock. 
We had cause. He was certainly feeding on 
those unpoetical goumaments, who were ulti- 
mately destined to revel upon us, and he did this 
three times a day, in such an easy, recherche 
way, that we had no words to express our grati- 
tude. The thing was too exquisite. It was re- 
ally like carrying the war into the grim enemy's 
country. We kept him amply supplied and he 



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WOODCOCK SHOOTING. 93 

fed equally well, when sharp set, at any period 
of the twenty-four hours. 

Often when engaged in reading or writing at 
night, in our little apartment, we have paused to 
listen as we heard him moving about in his still, 
prying way, turning over the dead leaves and 
probing the crannies of the box in pursuit of his 
prey. When the bars were removed, he some- 
times flew out, and after making a survey of the 
room — to ascertain, as we supposed, if a pet 
spaniel was present — invariably took a position 
close to our feet, which he was fond of playfully 
striking at with his long bill. This was slightly 
bent and protuberant at the middle of the upper 
mandible, giving him a strange and somewhat 
grotesque appearance. 

We have often watched this bird attentively, 
when he was engaged in feeding from surfaces 
of different depths and consistency, which had 
been purposely presented to him, after he was 
full grown. When his food was merely thrown 
out of a cup in the usual way, if not very hun- 
gry, he would stand steadfastly eyeing the coil- 
ing, twisting mass, waiting patiently until some 
of its component parts had disengaged them- 
selves, and crawled under the dead leaves or into 
the angles or edges of the box ; then slowly in- 



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94 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

serting the end of his bill into their hiding places, 
he drew them out one by one, and, lifting them 
gently up, swept them into his gullet by a sim- 
ple motion of the head and neck, and an almost 
imperceptible movement of the tongue. If his 
appetite was keen, however, he did not stand to 
parley, but attacked the mass pell-mell, striking 
and devouring each worm singly with astonish- 
ing ease and despatch, until his wants were satis- 
fied or not a single individual remained. 

Before he was fully feathered the worms could 
easily be observed twisting in his crop, as he sat 
dozing at his ease, like an alderman after his din- 
ner. No doubt some of our delicate readers will 
regard this as rather an indifferent subject of 
remark ; but we assure them, without intending 
in the least to crack jokes, that the sight was 
nuts to us, and we were at a loss to invent means 
to glorify that woodcock. 

The snake-bird — Plotus Melanogaster — which 
does not even eat snakes, by the way, and the 
secretary bird, which does — were mere gobbling 
creatures of instinct compared with him. He 
went to his feasts as scientifically and with as 
much gusto as LucuUus himself. It really seemed 
as if his whole tribe had owed the worms of the 
earth an irreconcilable grudge since the days of 



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WOODCOCK SHOOTING. 95 

Adam. If so, they had no time to cry peccavi ; 
they did not even wriggle at his bill's point ; but 
almost seemed to glide voluntarily down his 
throat, so quickly and evenly did they disappear. 
Beholding this, we gave free vent to our glee, 
and remembering a line of Lord Byron's, which 
disagreeably intimates that man's body was made 
"to clog the soul and feast the worm," we at once 
came to the sage conclusion that a woodcock was 
made for exactly an inverse purpose ; and not being 
able to compete with his lordship's all-engrossing 
verse, we contented ourselves with granting our 
bird fall supplies, besides decreeing him '* the 
garland of the war." And to say the truth, he 
deserved it. He would empty a pint cup of the 
small reptiles in twenty-four hours ; and as for 
trying his , ingenuity by hiding them three or 
four inches deep in the soft, moist earth, why a 
covey of birds feeding in the stubbles, with the 
scent blowing freely from their feathers, had 
about as much chance of escaping from your 
pointer's nose, as the enemy from his infallible 
bill. 

But how did he proceed to effect this, you ask; 
what was his system of tactics ? My dear reader, 
compose yourself and listen. 

When placed upon ground thus prepared, if 



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96 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

his fast had been purposely protracted, he would 
first industriously dibble the earth with his bill, 
striking it rapidly a dozen times or more into the 
cover, after the manner of a snipe ; then seating 
himself on his breast, or more frequently stand- 
ing in the middle of the box, he turned his large 
full eyes intently on the holes thus bored, in a 
very singular and knowing way. The first time 
which we saw him in this attitude, we felt as- 
sured of what was to follow, and that he was in- 
stinctively acquainted with the habits of his prey. 
Presently, after the lapse of a moment or two, 
you observe his neck feathers slightly rufile, and 
that instant, with the quickness of thought, he 
half turned his head, struck and devoured a worm. 
In this manner he continued to feed, occasionally 
shifting his ground a few steps and boring afresh, 
until the whole space was thoroughly riddled and 
not a single worm left. 

We have observed him thus employed for more 
than half an hour at a time, and have no doubt 
that he was materially assisted in his operations 
by the movements of the worms, which evidently 
worked up towards the holes bored in the soil. 
Whether he was guided by the sense of smell or 
not, we are not prepared to say. In fact, some 
experiments which were made at the time in re- 



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WOODCOCK SHOOTING. 97 

fereuce to this point, inclined ns to think that 
this sense was obtuse in our bird. 

Mr. Bowles, an English traveller, who, many 
years since, had the pleasure of observing wood- 
cock feed in an aviary, supposed that they dis- 
covered their prey by this faculty alone, because 
he noticed that in boring they never struck their 
bill into the earth further than the orifice of the 
nostrils. The inference, however, is fallible, for 
the reason that birds breathe chiefly through 
their spiracles, and are very sensitive to the in- 
troduction of any thing but air into them, as you 
may easily satisfy yourself by noticing pigeons 
and fowls when they drink, or feed upon soft 
food. 

The circumstance that the woodcock, as he 
expresses it, " never missed its aim,'' is more con- 
clusive. Microscopic dissection has revealed the 
fact, that the bill of the bird in question is sup- 
plied with a branch of the cranical nerves, the 
minute filaments of which are distributed to the 
knob at the end of the upper mandible, as in the 
case of the snipe — scolopax Wilsonii — the tip of 
whose bill after death becomes finely pitted or 
dimpled, though in life it is very smooth ; the 
sense of hearing in birds is supposed to be much 
more delicate than that of smell ; the sight is the 



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98 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

most acute of all the other faculties; and in the 
case of the woodcock, as before remarked, the 
eyes are unusually large and full, and set high 
in the skull to enlarge the field of vision by the 
reception of the faintest ray of light which may 
enter the dark coverts in which they feed ; so 
that if we suppose that our woodcock, while 
standing in his striking attitude over the holes 
he had bored when the worms were buried be- 
yond his reach, was actually scenting their pecu- 
liar odor, listening to their movements in the 
earth — ^like the woodpecker to those of the in- 
sects which his death-taps on the surface have 
started from the interior of the hollow limb — and 
watching for them to crawl up in his sight or 
within the length of his bill, we then have a 
combination of four faculties admirably adapted 
to the support of this bird in its wild state, when, 
from its powers of digestion and the nature of its 
prey, it is known to require a prodigious quan- 
tity of food. 

Woodcock have been killed at all hours of the 
day, and yet those who have examined their ali- 
mentary parts will tell you that they rarely found 
a worm even in their crops, and never in their 
stomachs ; hence the old and prevalent idea that 
they abstracted the substance of the worm by 



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WOODCOCK SHOOTING. 99 

suction. By some men of no erudition yet of 
ordinary intelligence, this absurdity is still be- 
lieved. 

However, without wishing to detract in the 
least from the merits of Mr. Bowles' observa- 
tions, we will now relate the course of our expe- 
riments, leaving the reader to judge of the 
result. 

We took our bird from its place of confine- 
ment at its usual feeding time, and buried in 
each comer of the box two large earth-worms, an 
inch and a half deep in the soft, black loam ; he 
was then immediately replaced, and at once be- 
gan to bore eagerly in the middle of the box, 
where, for the purpose of observation, his food 
was usually placed ; it was not until he had ex- 
plored that spot thoroughly that he changed his 
ground, and at last discovered and drew out the 
objects concealed. We continued the experi- 
ment until he fell into the habit of first searching 
the comers of the box ; we then hid a dozen 
worms the same depth, in the same kind of soil, 
but in the old spot ; the result was the same. 
He first went to one comer of the box, and being 
disappointed there, bored in another, and finally 
returned to his usual place. We intended to 
have carried our experiments farther, but being 



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100 KRroER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

obliged to go to the city, our stay was prolonged 
for a fortnight, and upon our return, we found 
the bird had died from neglect, or, as the farmer's 
boys in whose care it was left, pertinaciously 
asserted, from the effects of a surfeit. 

Woodcock often return for successive seasons 
to the same spots to rear their young. This fact 
was long ago satisfactorily proved in England, 
and in Pennsylvania nests have been found for 
two springs in succession, beneath the same bush, 
on a piece of slightly elevated ground sheltered 
from the west winds by a woods. We have not the 
least doubt of the identity of the inhabitant ; in 
fact, this peculiarity is remarked in many other 
migratory birds of a more familiar nature. Wil- 
son, the father of American ornithology, whose 
acuteness of observation was only equalled by his 
regard for truth and his unobtrusive modesty, 
repeatedly refers to it as not the least interesting 
among the habits of the creatures he was called 
upon describe. 

The woodcock has been known to exhibit, 
under certain circumstances, curious symptoms 
of anger, somewhat similar to the pompous strut- 
tings of the turkey. On the twenty-fiifth of Au- 
gust Mr. Krider was shooting in the mountains 
of Bedford county, Pennsylvania, birds being 



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WOODCOCK SHOOTING. IQl 

then numerous in this section of the country, 
when a cock suddenly flew up and alit within a 
few feet of the nose of his dog. It ran slowly 
before the animal, dropping its wings, spreading 
its tail, ruffling its plumage, and manifesting 
every sign of impotent rage. Mr. Krider was so 
surprised at these manoeuvres, never having seen 
any thing of the kind in the woodcock before, that 
when it sprung at last he missed it with both 
barrels, and at the report of his piece, eight or 
nine birds rose close to him, in a small, swampy 
thicket where he started the first bird. From 
the fact of this bird being of unusual size, he was 
of opinion that it was a female. 

Mr. William McGuigan also shot a bird in the 
state of New Jersey, under similar circum- 
stances. We saw this specimen in the Chinese 
Museum, prepared in that gentleman's inimitable 
way, exactly in the position in which it was 
killed, and from a casual inspection of it, believe 
it to be a female bird. A sporting acquaintance 
of ours, while " cripple shooting," saw a bird, 
which the dogs had flushed in the covert where 
several cocks had already been started and killed, 
alight on the bank, and perform the same eccen- 
tric movements within a few feet of him. 

In the summer of 1846, while we were con- 
7 



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102 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

versing with a fanner who was engaged in har- 
rowing com, a cock suddenly flew out of a woods 
and alit in a furrow close to the horses, who were 
standing still at the moment. The bird did not 
appear to notice us, but drooping its wings and 
inverting its feathers, stuck its bill in the ground 
several times as in the act of boring ; before we 
had an opportunity of noticing it further, the rat- 
tling of the gears, caused by a movement of one 
of the horses, startled it, and with a shrill cry it 
flew back to the woods. Some rain had fallen 
the night previous, and the soil was wet to the 
depth of an inch or more ; the com was still 
short, and from our position on the fence we 
could distinctly see the bird. Whether our pre- 
sence had any thing to do with its actions we cmi- 
not say ; possibly, if it had remained a few mo- 
ments something might have followed to eluci- 
date the mystery.* 

Woodcock shooting in the immediate vicinity 
of Philadelphia, like snipe shooting, has declined 
within a few years and from similar causes, but 
not to the same extent. Great numbers of birds 
are still shot in the months of June and July 

* Woodcocks are sometimes seen boring into decayed stumps for 
wood-worms. We once saw a bird thus engaged in the crotch of a 
dead willow tree. 



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WOODCOCK SHOOTING. 103 

along the banks of the Delaware, by those who 
pursue this sport for pleasure or profit. It is 
quite a frequent occurrence in favorable seasons, 
for two or three good shots to kill from twenty to 
thirty cocks before nine o'clock in the morning, 
between the navy-yard and the mouth of the 
Schuylkill, a distance of five miles. In fact, 
to enjoy this kind of shooting at all, you must 
be up and off long before sunrise, so as to be 
on the ground and have your sport over be- 
fore the heat of the day. If the weather has 
been dry for some time previous, you may be cer- 
tain of finding birds in " the cripples," that is, 
if your purpose has not been forestalled by some 
detachment of bank-shooters, who would appear 
to have slept on their arms under the trees in 
some adjoining meadow, so as to commence the 
action as soon as it is light enough to shoot. The 
vociferous clamor and continued firing of the 
sharp-shooters, when birds are abundant, furnish 
no bad representation of a skirmish in the gray 
of dawn, while their flushed faces and constant 
dodging up and down the bank (often loading as 
they run) to keep pace with the yells of their 
canine assistants and the shouts of their compa- 
nions in the covert, in no wise detract from the 
merits of the scene. It is customary for them to 



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104 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

go in parties of four, two of whom enter " the 
cripple" with three or four setter dogs, while one 
of the others remains on the bank, and the other 
takes his place on the " drift" on the outside of 
the cripple nearest the river. 

Spaniels, by the way, are held in little esteem 
for this arduous sport, and they who use them 
select a stock much stronger and hardier than 
the little English cocker, which is worse than 
useless. The last soon fag in the heavy, encum- 
bered ground, and after a little experience in 
what they are expected to do, learn to skulk, or 
to answer their excited master's "hie on !" with 
shrill, helpless cries of concern, as if to intimate 
that they are sorry for it, but really the thing 
will not do. Setters, being better able to stand 
the work, on the contrary, take so kindly to it, 
that they often give tongue on every bird, and 
acquire a habit of flushing game, which, of course, 
destroys their utility as field dogs. It is seldom 
that even the best bred setter, if encouraged, sea- 
son after season, to range and hunt out a cripple, 
can be depended on out of it ; instances are, how- 
ever, known, where dogs have seemed to com- 
prehend exactly what was required of them, when 
hunting the same description of bird in different 
kinds of ground ; and we have heard of setters. 



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WOODCOCK SHOOTING. 105 

and more especially pointers, who, in the lan- 
guage of the doggerel. 

Would flush a woodcock in a swamp, 
And stand it in the clear. 

But these instances are rare, and if you have any 
regard for the standing of your dog, do not suffer 
him to enter a cripple. 

However, the bank-shooters are at their sta- 
tions; the dogs dash in, and presently you 
hear a yell, followed by a shot, or a shout of 
"mark! bird up!" from within, and a report or 
two from the bank, or the outside, according to 
the direction which the bird takes. You may 
readily imagine what ensues, when you are told 
that every step in the dark cover is in deep, black 
mire, strewn with decaying drift-wood, and over- 
grown with stunted trees, reeds and thick alder 
bushes, and when the birds are put up rapidly, 
the alarm-notes, firing, and yells of men and' dogs 
increase in proportion, while the affrighted ob- 
jects of pursuit, driven from every covert by the 
dogs, dart up and down the cripple, to fall vic- 
tims at last to the unerring, aim of the marks- 
men. When the latter are up to their business, 
few, indeed, escape, although it must be said that, 
if the woodcock is naturally a stupid bird, as 
some people assert, cripple shooting is a rare 



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106 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

mode of quickening his torpid faculties. Under 
the spur of its application he sometimes betakes 
him to the wiles of his cousin, the snipe, turning 
and twisting on the wing so as to elude the shoot- 
er's aim — darting and flitting low round the trees 
and bushes, so as to disappoint his most sanguine 
calculations — now springing, with a shrill cry, at 
his very feet, and now stealing away silently, at 
his back, until the man grows bewildered in spite 
of himself, his dog loses heart, and the bird by 
sheer dint of its ingenuity escapes from them 
both. It is ludicrous, in this case, t6 observe the 
manner in which either manifest their chagrin. 
The shooter besmirched, perhaps, from top to toe, 
his face begrimmed with powder and his eyes 
blinded with sweat, mutters his disappointment 
in " curses not loud but deep," while Dash, in as 
sorry a plight, looks wearily up in his vexed 
face, with a despondent wag of his tail, as if, 
though loath to admit the fact, he needs must own 
that that cobk was too much for him, too. This 
is the kind of shooting against which many 
sportsmen, with some appearance of pique and 
more of justice, yearly exclaim. Should the 
weather continue dry, it lasts from early in June 
until the birds leave the cripples to moult, in the 
month of August. 



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WOODCOCK SHOOTING. 107 

Some of the old haunts for cock along the Dela- 
ware, were very famous in our young days. The 
drifts or higher portions of the flats, where the 
refuse of the tides had collected, were sure spots, 
especially those where the fishermen resorted to 
dig up worms. On the Cakehouse drift fourteen 
or fifteen birds have been killed in one morning. 
Hay Creek cripple was considered well worth 
hunting out, and at the name of Whitehall many 
an old cock shooter will start as at the sound of 
a trumpet. This was situated on Hollander's 
Creek, and was esteemed the best place within 
ten miles around. The drift at the head of 
Broad Marsh, below the Point House, and all the 
drifts and cripples along the river and the creeks 
running into it, were, and are at the present day, 
excellent places for cocks in dry weather. But 
if rain falls in any considerable quantity, the 
birds then leave these places and disperse over 
the meadows. Strange as it may sound to the 
sportsman, many persons who shoot are utterly 
ignorant of this fact. Mr. Krider was once in- 
vited by a friend to shoot cocks in the neighbor- 
hood of Wilmington, Delaware ; the season had 
been dry, and many birds had been killed in the 
cripples ; but a heavy shower of rain having wet 
the meadows and corn-fields, the party hunted in 



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108 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

the usual places in vain, to the great annoyance 

of , who, having found them abundant for 

several successive days previous, could in no 
wise account for the sudden disappearance. 

" Where do you shoot snipe ?'' inquired Krider, 
after the other had completely exhausted him- 
self and his patience in his fruitless endeavors to 
show sport. 

"In yonder meadow," answered ; "but 

you will find none there at this season." 

" Let us try, nevertheless," said Krider. 

After much persuasion he consented to lead 
the way, and in this meadow they killed twenty- 
seven cocks, to the great delight and suprise of 

, who was now extremely anxious to visit all 

such golden spots within the compass of a day's 
hunt. The party brought in forty-five birds at 
night-fall, every one of which was killed in the 
meadows. 

On another occasion, in the year eighteen 
hundred and forty-one, Mr. Krider, in company 
with a friend, killed sixty-three birds in a range 
of meadows and a maple swamp near Hights- 
town. New Jersey, by ten o'clock in the morn- 
ing, returning to Philadelphia the same day. 
The ground at this place has been so much im- 
proved since his visit that few birds are to be 
found there at the present day. 



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WOODCOCK SHOOTING. 109 

At most of the places mentioned in the article 
on snipe shooting, cocks are abundant in July if 
the grounds be sufficiently wet ; but at Port Penn, 
Delaware, some distance in the rear of Price's 
hotel, there is a maple swamp, surrounded by 
very thick tussock meadows, which was and, 
perhaps, is still very excellent ground. On one 
occasion, three shooters killed ninety-three birds 
before mid-day among the tussocks and in the 
swamp. We have at times found them abund- 
ant in the mountainous parts of the state in Au- 
gust, September, October; and on the tenth of 
November, when partridge shooting, in Lehigh 
county, we killed in the woods seventeen of the 
finest birds which we ever saw bagged. It is 
worthy of remark that, in the fall of 1845, we shot 
two woodcock in a meadow, where a few moments 
afterwards, the dogs pointed snipe. This oc- 
curred in Montgomery county, on a small branch 
of the Perkiomen Creek, watering a valley a short 
distance from the little village of Salfordville. 
While killing a few partridges for the table, we 
unexpectedly started three cocks from among 
some scattered bushes which bordered a small 
run. Upon examining these, it was discovered 
that they had not yet done moulting. A few 
hundred yards further, six or seven snipe were 



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110 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

sprung exactly in the place where we expected 
to find them, and while charging, a young dog 
in company, escaping our notice for a moment, 
ran out and stood in a piece of sedgy ground, 
partially covered with rank grass and rushes. 
On our approach he was staunchly backed by 
the old dog, and two more cocks sprung. The 
last proved to be in the same condition as the 
others ; but though we beat this meadow care- 
fully and several others in the course of the 
afternoon, we saw no more birds, nor have we 
ever found them since in a meadow at this sea- 
son of the year. 

When hunting rulfed grouse in October, 
among the stony hills of Montgomery and Berks, 
we have sometimes killed cocks in small spots of 
black marshy ground in the very midst of the 
huge gray rocks, from some one of which a 
spring issued. During the heat of summer we 
have found them in dense, dry thickets and 
copses not far from the feeding ground, and when 
driven out into the glare of day they almost in- 
variably pitch close to a fence, or a tree, as if 
blinded by the light. There is a small species 
of hawk which builds its nest in a retired part 
of the woods, and is a great enemy to these birds 
on the breeding ground. We have never been 



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WOODCOCK SHOOTING. HI 

able to shoot or trap it. It has a shrill scream; 
is between the size of a sparrow-hawk and the 
faho colunibarius^ and is exceedingly watchful 
and wary. It often visits the orchard and the 
vicinity of the barn-yard early in the morning to 
carry off young chickens. We have several times 
seen it swoop down from the topmost branch of 
a tree and seize a woodcock, and have spent 
hours in the woods on foot and on horseback fol- 
lowing its cry in vain endeavor to shoot it, or to 
discover its nest. A son of the farmer informed 
us that he had twice found the latter near the 
top of very tall trees ; in each case the young 
birds had flown, and the bottom of the nest was 
covered with the bones and other remains of va- 
rious small birds. Its cry is heard in the deepest 
part of the woods, at all hours of the day; its tail 
is barred with white ; but whether it is ihefako 
velox of Wilson or no, we are unable to say. 

We certainly never felt inclined to doubt the 
accuracy of Audubon's remark that the wood- 
cock never feeds on salt marshes, until last sum- 
mer, when we were requested by one of a party 
of four at supper, to taste a portion of a bird, 
which we did in turn, and all agreed that it was 
decidedly sedgy. This bird was one of eighteen 
which had been killed in a meadow below 



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112 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

Pennsgrove, on the previous day^ by two of the 
party present. They were served np with their 
heads on, so that no deception could have been 
practiced had the circumstances warranted such 
a suspicion. Brewer has remarked that a per- 
son, technically ignorant of ornithology, would 
at once pick out a woodcock from a snipe, from 
something peculiar in its appearance. Besides 
the "plumed tibid, the tarvi are much shorter, 
and shows that the bird is not intended to wade, 
or to frequent very marshy situations, like the 
snipe. The plumage of the former is also of a 
more sombre shade." 

When found in a meadow they are much 
more easily killed than snipe, and with steady 
dogs very few ought to escape. This bird, like 
the snipe, has a remarkably game look ; some 
sportsmen before consigning them to the bag, 
display as much fondness over them as the two 
executioners so admirably described in Quintin 
Durward, were wont to do over their victims, 
with this difference, that the latter spoke to liv- 
ing and the former to dead ears. 



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THE RICE-BUNTING, OR REED-BIRD. 

EMBEEIZA ORTZIVORA. 

Description,—^' The rice-bunting is seven and 
a half inches long, and eleven and a half in extent. 
His spring dress is as follows : Upper part of 
the head, wings, tail, and sides of the neck, and 
whole lower parts black ; the feathers frequently 
skirted with brownish yellow, as he passes into 
the colors of the female ; back of the head, a 
cream color ; back, black, seamed with brown- 
ish yellow ; scapulars pure white ; rump and 
tail coverts the same ; lower part of the back, 
bluish white ; tail, formed like those of the wood- 
pecker genus, and often used in the same man- 
ner, being thrown in to support it w^hile ascend- 
ing the stalks of the reed ; this habit of throwing 
in the tail it retains even in the cage ; legs, a 
brownish flesh color ; hind heel, very long; bill, 
a bluish horn color; eye, hazel. In the month 
of June this plumage gradually changes to a 
brownish yellow, like that of the female, which 
has the back streaked with brownish black; 



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114 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

whole lower parts, dull yellow; bill, reddish 
flesh color; legs and eyes as in the male. 
The young birds retain the dress of the female 
until the early part of the succeeding spring; 
the plumage of the female undergoes no ma- 
terial change of color." 

We have nothing new to say of this well- 
known and delicious bird. It visits this part of 
the state early in May, when the song of the 
males is heard in every meadow. 

Such was the impression made upon us, last 
spring, by the sweet, tinkling notes which pro- 
ceeded from a large flock perched on a willow 
tree, that although in search of specimens at the 
moment, we took the gun from our shoulder 
and forbore to shoot. The actions of the male 
while singing reminded us somewhat of those 
of the canary. The notes are tiny and delicate, 
like those of a small musical-box, but extremely 
rapid, short and varied, and very expressive of 
an etherial lightness of spirit. If the listener 
closes his eyes for a moment, he might almost 
imagine the presence of some fairy beings, ca- 
rolling in the air to the praise of the new-born 
May. In an instant, however, the concert ceases, 
and, opening your eyes, perhaps you see the 
whole flock in the act of alighting on the ground. 



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THE RICE-BUNTING, OR REED-BIRD. 115 

In a few moments they fly to the tree again, or 
upon a rail fence, when the song is resumed 
with the same sweet and surprising effect. 

They remain but a week or two, and then 
pass to the northward and eastward to prepare 
their nests. When the hen is sitting, the notes 
of the male are emitted in the air near the nest, 
and have been pronounced to be in reality more 
pleasing than those of the European sky-lark. 
They have no song in the fall, merely uttering 
their vlsubI chink, with which almost every one 
living in the vicinity of the city is familiar. 

We killed numbers of these birds in Septem- 
ber last, in the corn-fields of Montgomery, and 
found many of them in very good order. The 
same season, partridges being very scarce, we 
shot many of the alauda magna, or common 
meadow-lark, which were unusually abundant, 
and in better order than we remember to have 
ever found them before. The young birds were, 
in fact, hardly inferior to the partridge, and we 
continued to supply our table with them until 
the severe weather set in, when the flocks dis- 
appeared. The shore or winter-lark was also 
more common than usual in this section of the 
country. They fly in flocks of from twenty to 
a hundred, and have a shrill, pitiful note, some- 



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116 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

what similar to that of the killdeer plover, but 
much less loud and distinct. They are as large 
and quite as plump as the reed-bird in Septem- 
ber, and make a very agreeable variety for the 
table. On a twenty acre rye-field, which had 
been strewn with manure during the winter, we 
killed sixty-three of these birds in the month of 
January. Before the flock rises they sometimes 
make a low, curring noise, and after having 
been shot at, circle swiftly round the field seve- 
ral times before they alight again. It is seldom, 
however, that the shooter can knock down more 
than two or three at a shot, as they fly loosely, 
and never huddle together on the ground, ex- 
cept when sunning themselves at noon. In a 
state of captivity they are very wild and restless, 
and we have never been able to preserve them 
for any length of time. 

Large flocks of the little fringilla linaria, or 
lesser red-poll, appeared in the fields during the 
past winter. We shot great numbers of them 
feeding in the stubbles, especially before a 
storm; and, as far as our experience goes, they 
are all marked at this season with the crimson 
patch on the crown. In a few, the color of the 
patch was less decided than in others ; but out 
of hundreds which we examined, not a single 



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THE RICE-BUNTING, OR REED-BIRD. H? 

individual was found entirely destitute of it. 
The rudiments of the red patch on the breast 
and rump can always be distinguished on the 
young males in their winter dress. In some of 
the adults it is of a rose color, and in others of a 
blood-red. On some occasions we found the flocks 
dispersed in the woods, gleaning from the twigs 
of the tallest trees, and again observed them in 
the low meadows, where they are fond of dab- 
bling in the runs on a warm day. Their ap- 
pearance, however, was always uncertain, and 
after being shot at several times, the flocks often 
disappeared for a time from the vicinity. They 
thrive in confinement, and have a peculiar chir- 
rup, yery different from their usual call, which 
resembles that of the yellow-bird (fringilla tris- 
tis) and of the canary. We sent a female red- 
poll, which had been slightly injured on the 
wing, to a lady in Philadelphia, where we saw 
it in perfect health, some weeks afterwards, in a 
cage with some canaries. 



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THE GRASS PLOVER. 

BARTRAM'S SANDPIPER— FRINGA BARTRAMIA. 

Description. — "The grass plover is twelve 
inches long, and twenty-one in extent ; the bill 
is an inch and a half long, slightly bent down- 
wards, and wrinkled at the base, the upper man- 
dible black on its ridge, the lower, as well as the 
edge of the upper, of a fine yellow ; front, stripe 
over the eye, neck and breast, pale ferruginous, 
marked with small streaks of black, which, on 
the lower part of the breast, assume the form of 
arrow-heads; crown, black, the plumage slightly 
skirted with whitish; chin, orbit of the eye, 
whole belly and vent, pure white ; hind head 
and neck above ferruginous, minutely streaked 
with black ; back and scapulars, black, the for- 
mer slightly skirted with ferruginous, the latter 
with white; tertials, black, bordered with white;' 
primaries, plain black; shaft of the exterior 
quill, snowy, its inner vane elegantly pectinated 
with white; secondaries pale brown, spotted on 
their outer vanes with black, and tipped with 



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THE GRASS PLOVER. 119 

white ; greater coverts, dusky, edged with pale 
ferruginous, and spotted with black; lesser co- 
verts, pale ferruginous, each feather broadly 
bordered with white, within which is a concen- 
tric semi-circle of black ; rump and tail coverts, 
deep brown black, slightly bordered with white; 
tail, tapering, of a pale brown orange color, beau- 
tifully spotted with black, the middle feathers 
centred with dusky ; legs, yellow, tinged with 
green, the outer toe joined to the middle by a 
membrane; lining of the wings, elegantly barred 
with black and white; iris of the eye, dark or 
blue-back, very large. The male and female 
are nearly alike. Weight upwards of three- 
quarters of a pound." 

This plump and finely marked bird appears 
ill the fields of Montgomery county, Pennsyl- 
vftnia, about the middle of April, and sometimes 
earlier. They are then in good order, not at all 
shy at first, but after having been shot at, be- 
come extremely vigilant and difficult to ap- 
proach. For several weeks they frequent the 
grass fields in companies of never more than 
three or four, and early in May separate into 
pairs. We have flushed the hen from her eggs, 
deposited in a grass field, without any appear- 
ance of a nest, on the tenth of May. In the 



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120 KRTDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

spring and during the summer, they have a pe- 
culiar, prolonged scream, which they emit in 
the air, on the ground, or from a fence-rail, on 
which last they frequently alight, stretching 
fheir slender and elegantly formed necks, and 
opening and spreading their wings. At this 
season of the year their sharp, rolling whistle is 
comparatively seldom heard. They run and fly 
well, but their suspicious manner of lifting their 
heads readily betrays them on the ground, while 
their strange cry often leads the shooter to the 
field which they inhabit. Mr. Jacob Beck, an 
old sportsman, who had killed many of these 
birds in the month of September, was totally 
unacquainted with their common note on the 
breeding ground, and would not believe them to 
be the same birds, until he had examined several 
specimens, shot in the fields of Montgomery, in 
the neighborhood of Perkiomen Creek. They 
feed principally upon grass-hoppers and other 
insects. We once killed a bird early in the 
summer which had two large gooseberries in its 
crop. In this part of the country they are called 
regan-fegles, or rain-birds, from the supposition 
that their scream is ominous of wet weather. 
They will not lie to the dogs, and must be killed 
by stratagem. In August they begin to leave 



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THE GRASS PLOVER. 121 

the uplands with their young, though occasion- 
ally a bird or two may be found in an old stub- 
ble or clover-field in a remote part of the farm, 
as late as the middle of September. They are 
then excessively fat and very delicate eating. 
The market shooters kill many of them in Au- 
gust and September, on the meadows bordering 
upon the river Delaware below the city, resort- 
ing to many stratagems to cover their approach, 
such as wading ditches, or secreting themselves 
behind cattle and fences, while their compa- 
nions steal on the birds on their hands and 
knees. Unlike the golden plover, or bull-head 
of the river shooters, this species is never found 
frequenting ponds, or the banks of ditches, and 
is never seen in large flocks in the upland 
country, unless, driven inland by storms. 

The grass plover migrates in small bodies, and 
almost every one has heard its whistle sounding 
over the city, apparently from among the stars, 
on a calm summer night. Both varieties some- 
times sweep over the lower meadows in a long 
extended line, flying low and with great swift- 
ness. The grass plover is far superior in flavor 
to all the other varieties, the golden plover per- 
haps, excepted, and is much sought after by 
epicures. 



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122 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

We believe this bird is not found in Great 
Britain or upon the continent, the gray plover of 
Ireland, which bears some resemblance to it, being 
essentially different in its markings and habits. 
It is said to be common in some parts of the vast 
prairies of Missouri, but we are inclined to think, 
is nowhere very abundant. 

The kildeer plover has been with us all winter. 
We found them in companies of ten or twelve 
feeding in the rye-fields and low meadows after 
a thaw. They were very fat and excellent eating. 



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THE BULL-HEADED OR GOLDEN 
PLOVER. 



CHARADRIUS PLXJVIALIS. 



Description, — " The golden plover is ten inches 
and a half long, and twenty-one inches in extent; 
bill, short, of a dusky slate color ; eye, very large, 
bine black; nostrils, placed in a deep furrow, and 
half covered with a prominent membrane ; whole 
upper parts, black, thickly marked with roundish 
spots of various tints of a golden yellow; wing 
coverts, and hinder parts of the neck, pale brown, 
the latter streaked with yellowish; front, broad 
line over the eye, chin and sides, of the same 
yellowish white, streaked with small, pointed 
spots of brown olive; breast, gray, with olive 
and white ; sides, under the wings, marked thickly 
with tran verse bars of pale olive ; belly and vent, 
white; wing-quills, black, the middle shafts 
marked with white ; greater coverts black, tipped 
with white; tail, rounded, black, barred with 
triangular spots of golden yellow; legs, dark 
dusky slate; feet, three-toed, with generally the 



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124 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

slight rudiments of a heel, the outer toe con- 
nected, as far as the first joint, with the middle 
one. 

"The male and female differ very little in 
color." 

This is also a handsomely marked and delicate 
bird for the table. It is, however, never seen far 
inland in the United States, but chiefly frequents 
the sea-coast, and the flat shores of such large 
rivers as flow uninterruptedly into the ocean. 
It is very common in the northern parts of 
Europe, where it breeds on high and heathy 
mountains. In North America it is supposed 
to rear its young in the remote, Artie regions, 
where the ground is more open and solitary, and 
less covered with forests. Small flocks have, 
occasionally, been seen for a day or two in Mont- 
gomery county, whither they have been driven 
by the September gales. 

They are killed in September and October 
along the Delaware and its tributaries, and 
under] the skilful guidance of Westley Stints- 
man, the renowned paddler, we have sometimes 
surprised and effected considerable execution 
among flocks seated on the edges of ditches and 
ponds on the meadows near the mouth of the 
Schuylkill. The mode of approaching them is 



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THE BULL-HEADED OR GOLDEN PLOVER. 125 

by silently paddling up the ditches and creeks 
in a small, railing skiff when the tide is at its 
height. This is done to the best advantage after 
an overflow of the meadows. Like the grass 
plover, it is said to lay four eggs of a pale, olive 
color, variegated with blackish spots. We were 
informed by a man who has killed great numbers 
of these birds for the market, that they some- 
times become so sedgy as seriously to affect their 
sale. He attributed this to some change in the 
character of the marshes in the neighborhood of 
Salem, AUoway's, and other creeks, where he 
was in the habit of shooting. 



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RAIL SHOOTING. 



RAIL— RALLUS CAROLINU&-COMMON SORA RAIL, OR, LITTLE 
AMERICAN WATER HEN. 



Description. — "The rail is nine inches long, 
and fourteen in extent; bill, yellow, blackish 
towards the point ; lores, front, crown, chin, and 
stripe down the throat, black ; line over the eye, 
cheeks and breast, fine light ash; sides of the 
crown, neck, and. upper parts generally, olive 
brown, streaked with black,, and also with long 
lines of pure white, the feathers being centred 
with black on an olive ground, and edged with 
white; these touches of white are shorter near 
the shoulder of the wing, lengthening as they de- 
scend; wing plain olive brown; tertials, streaked 
with black, and long lines of white; tail, pointed, 
dusky olive brown, centred with black, the four 
middle feathers bordered for half their length 
with lines of white; lower part of the breast 
marked with semi-circular lines of white, on a 
light ash ground; belly, white; sides, under the 
wings, deep olive, barred with black, white, and 



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RAIL SHOOTING. 127 

reddish buff; vent, brownisli buff; legs, feet, 
and naked part of the thighs, yellowish green; 
exterior edge of the wing, white; eyes, reddish 
hazel. 

" The females, and young of the first season, 
have the throat white, the breast pale brown, 
and little or no black on the head. The males 
may always be distinguished by their ashy blue 
breasts and black throats." 

During the summer months, the flat shores of 
the Delaware, in winter so bleak and devoid of 
interest, present to the stranger's gaze a spectacle 
of unwonted beauty. Standing upon the long 
embankment which keeps off the tides from the 
range of meadows behind him, he sees a vast, 
waving belt or border of bright, luxuriant green, 
extending from the base of the bank to the low- 
water mark, and stretching along the course of 
the river, in rich, dense array, as far as the eye 
can reach. When the tall reeds which compose 
this magnificent fringe, have attained their full 
height, their vivid verdue and slender feathery 
tops, over and among which countless flocks of 
birds are continually rising and settling, impart 
an almost oriental character to these alluvial 
marshes. The effect is heightened by the com- 
pactness with which the wild plants grow, the 



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128 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

stifling heat which is endured among them on 
an August or September noon, and the various 
descriptions of animal life, with which, at this 
season of the year, the miniature forest abounds. 
The waters alternately leave the flats bare, 
and cover them to the depth of four or five feet ; 
the reeds rise from the ooze by erect stems, 
stout and strong below, and tapering away to 
their tops which bend and bow with every pass- 
ing breeze : upon the upper branches of these 
panicled tops, the nutritious seeds which are the 
bread of the wild birds of the air, are produced ; 
yellow blossoms adorn the lower ones; long, 
sword-like leaves flaunt from the stems, and 
drooping towards the water in the sultry silence 
of noon, seem, at every cool splash, to woo the 
embraces of the flood, or by their wild wavings 
and rustlings in the wind, when the tide is 
down, contribute not a little to the poetry of the 
scene. The reeds also grow abundantly upon 
the shore of all the tributaries of the Delaware, 
upon its bars and low, marshy islands, and along 
the ditches which intersect the meadows by the 
river-side. Cattle are fond of them, and may be 
daily seen straggling across the bank, and wad- 
ing upon the edge of the flats, to browse upon 
them on the flood. Many varieties of winged 



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KAIL SHOOTING. 129 

insects sport among the leaves of the reeds; 
minks and musk-rats prowl among the interlac- 
ing roots at low water ; the large, golden-eyed 
frog and the snapper crawl upon the ooze ; fish 
swarm among the stalks on the flood ; the soli- 
tary bittern roosts all day upon the higher por- 
tions of the flat; the marsh- wren binds its 
curious nest to the stalks, far above the dash 
of the stormiest tides ; the restless swallow darts 
to and fro in pursuit of gnats and flies, or pauses 
to perch on the fragile sprays of the panicle, 
which its weight bows in the gale ; woodcock 
and snipe are found in *^ the cripples" and upon 
" the drifts ;" red-winged black-birds, rice-bunt- 
ings, teal, mallard and other marsh ducks, feed 
upon the farinaceous seeds ; and here, above 
all, millions of the Carolina rail, or little 
American water hen, for ^several weeks find 
a rich repast, on their annual migration to the 
south. 

The mystery which once hung over the 
migratory movements of the whole genus, to 
which the bird under consideration belongs, has 
long been dispelled by the researches of the 
ornithologist, and now only exists in the minds 
of those who, from want of inclination or capa- 
city, are cut off from the use of books. 



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130 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

Like Wilson's snipe, a few of these birds 
breed in the Middle States. Few persons, in- 
deed, have been fortunate enough to see the 
nest of the Carolina rail. Mr. Krider, who for 
several years has paid considerable attention to 
the study of ornithology, has, however, he 
thinks, discovered it more than once, built in a 
bunch of coarse grass on the edge of the high 
marshes. In looking over his rough notes, we 
find that in the year eighteen hundred and 
forty-five, he found a nest on the Broad Marsh 
with the hen sitting upon it, cunningly con- 
cealed from view by the top of a tuft of grass, 
which was bent down and fastened to the nest. 
She left her eggs with evident reluctance, steal- 
ing away as it were, step by step, and constantly 
looking back to watch the intruder's intentions. 
We, ourselves, remember to have seen, some 
years ago, at the house of a medical gentleman 
of Montgomery county, Pennsylvania, a pre- 
pared specimen of the Rallus Carolinus, with 
her brood beside her, which the doctor assured us 
had been caught in his meadow on the previous 
June. We have also killed rail in the same 
month on a farm a few miles distant from the 
former place. It is well known, however, that 
the main body move on far to the north, return- 



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RAIL SHOOTING. 131 

ing with their young late in the summer, when 
on a calm, clear night, their cry may be dis- 
tinctly heard in the air, as they pass over the 
city to the marshes. Dennis Welsh, who for 
many years has occupied the situation of a 
watchman in one of the lower districts, and is 
well known to the sporting world as the oldest 
and perhaps the best pusher on the river, has 
informed us that, year after year, he has never 
failed to distinguish their voices sounding over 
his head, while he was silently traversing his 
beat at the dead hour of night. As these little 
visitors have long been a source of pleasure and 
profit to Dennis, who still prides himself on 
never having missed a tide, when there was 
water enough on the marsh to work his batteau, 
there is something curious in the idea of the 
veteran pusher mutely listening, night after 
night, on his rounds for the decisive evidences 
of their arrival, as if while fulfilling his functions 
as guardian of the public rest, he was also, in 
some sense, acting as watchman to his own 
private interests in the fields of air. Others, 
while fishing for eels at night on the outer edge 
of the flats, have repeatedly been startled by 
hearing rail alight singly in the water close to 
them, and instantly swim in among the reeds. 



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132 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

Remaining with us several weeks, and afford- 
ing much sport at a season of the year when 
there is little else to shoot, they then depart for 
the south even more suddenly than they came, 
and the pushing-pole and the rail-box is laid by 
until the succeeding year. 

Their course through the Southern States 
may be traced in the Same manner as their 
advance to the north in the spring, their appear- 
ance in the different degrees of latitude occurring 
at regular intervals, from Hudson's bay to the 
shores of the great gulf The idea is even en- 
tertained that they extend their flight to the 
south, beyond the limits of the continent. In 
regard to their apparent feebleness of wing, it 
has been long observed, that although from the 
development of their legs and feet, and the pecu- 
liar compressed shape of their bodies, it is evi- 
dent that they are especially formed for running 
in thick coverts, they have nevertheless been 
observed during the morning and evening twi- 
light, and in rough, windy weather, to fly entirely 
clear of cover with great freedom and swiftness. 
Hardly an old rail shooter but has seen them 
occasionally cross wide streams like the Dela- 
ware, when hard pushed by the boats. Late in 
the season, when the finer variety of the reed 



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RAIL SHOOTING. 133 

has been entirely beaten down by storms, we 
have flushed rail which have flown away from 
the skiff* in zig-zag lines, like snipe. When the 
reeds are in this condition, the birds may be 
readily seen running and feeding on either side 
of the boat, or arranging their plumage as quietly 
as pigeons on a roof. We have often watched 
their motions for ten minutes at a time, to the 
great discontent of the pusher, who, like the rest 
of his class, devoutly believed in the proverb, 
that "a bird in the boat was worth two in the 
reeds." On one occasion we saw a gun which 
had been inadvertently loaded with powder and 
wad only, discharged at a rail engaged in plum- 
ing itself; the bird did not even discontinue 
the business of the toilet, and was killed by the 
second barrel without moving from its position. 

In regard to the rail's being occasionally sub- 
ject to epileptic fits, superinduced by paroxysms 
of rage or fear, no satisfactory case of the kind 
has ever come under the immediate notice of the 
author or his editor. We were, however, shown 
a bird during the past season, which was said to 
have been shot at and apparently killed, but 
afterwards revived and was found to be wholly 
uninjured. It lived in good health for several 
weeks. One of the persons in the boat which 
9 



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134 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

picked up this bird, was an old friend of the 
editor's, and we are inclined to place implicit 
faith in his report. Dennis Welsh before no- 
ticed, also remembers two or three cases of the 
same nature in the course of thirty years' expe- 
rience in rail shooting. In one instance, the first 
bird which he flushed on the tide, fell dead at 
the simple report of the cap, the gun missing fire, 
which incident so affected the shooter, that, after 
examining the bird, he directed Dennis to put 
back for the ferry, declaring that he would shoot 
no more. There was a high tide rising on the 
marshes, and Welsh, who always enters deeply 
into the sport, ventured to expostulate; the gen- 
tleman, however, was firm in his determination 
never to kill another rail, and after deliberately 
destroying his box with a large stone, called for 
his carriage and departed. 

" From what I could hear," said the pusher, 
"I believe he has never been out since." An- 
other sage old pusher and duck paddler, who 
had also seen rail "play the 'possum," or kick 
the ^ bucket outright in this mysterious way, 
gravely advanced the opinion, that although 
these birds had not been touched by the charges 
aimed at their bodies, they had nevertheless 
died, indirectly, from the effects of lead in the 



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RAIL SHOOTING. 13$ 

system, having been previously afflicted with 
a species of disorder, which the learned faculty 
call colica pictonum, produced by indulging in 
morbid appetite for the pellets of shot, which 
are so thickly strewn on the marshes. This, 
the pusher thought, so debilitated their consti- 
tutions, that the mere report of villainous salt- 
petre, so annoying to Hotspur's human popin- 
jay, was too much for them. 

"The wital forc'es," said he, "couldn't stand 
it no how; hence they eyther tuk fits straight, 
or else straightened out in arnest." 

That shot are occasionally found in the diges- 
tive organs of water-fowl, is a fact known to 
many sportsmen ; it is true, also, that paralysis 
sometimes supercedes lead colic; these two 
facts being undisputed, we leave old E.'s theory 
to the attention of the curious without further 
comment. There is really nothing extraordi- 
nary in the idea, that intense apprehension 
should produce insensibility and even death, in 
a creature of such delicate organization as a rail, 
and we are strongly inclined to think that Mr. 
Orde — for whom we have great respect as the 
friend and companion of Wilson — mistook this 
feeling in the cases which he adduced, for that 
of rage. We have also full faith in the state- 



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136 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

ment of our friend, and in the experience of 
Dennis Welsh. As for the other man's theory, 
that carries conviction off its feet ; that speaks 
for itself. 

The rail is said to be a ventriloquist; very- 
respectable authority is also adduced for that 
assertion, and, with a simple qualification, we 
are disposed to believe it is a fact. 

The lordly lion of the desert — the banded fox 
of "the land of ice and snow" — the katydids 
which sing so merrily in the forest; the little 
cricket which chirps away at home in the 
porch, but cunningly creeps in towards the 
hearth when the nights grow chill — each and 
all possess, in some degree, the power of de-» 
ceiving the ear. We have shown in a former 
page how a dog became a somnambulist, and 
are now ready to endorse the assertion, that the 
whole family of the rails are — travelling ventrilo* 
quists. One thing is certain, if they are capable 
of counterfeiting death so cleverly, and of throw- 
ing their voices into any corner they please, 
they are accomplished birds, and it will not 
do to stigmatise them "ninny hammers" and 
"simpletons" any longer; we must hasten to 
amend that. There is more point, as well as 
magnanimity, in bestowing upon them the 



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RAIL SHOOTING. 137 

familiar and somewhat endearing epithets of 
"timid little water-fowl," "shy birds," as we 
shall see when we get further on, when rail are 
found baffling the bewildered pusher, by hiding 
under the submerged reeds, to escape being 
riddled hj a charge of No. 8, or diving like 
the devil or a bay black-head, to avoid being 
knocked on the head. 

It would be well, also, to remember that two 
different branches of the family have been 
raised to royal dignity ; the rallus elegans 
being styled the king-rail in America, while the 
rallus crexy by the unanimous voice of the 
people of Old England, savants excepted, was 
long ago crowned king of the tetrao coturnix^ 
the wandering and warlike quail. 

Rail often leave the marshes and come upon 
the dry meadows, seldom remaining there longer 
than an hour or two, and never wandering far 
from their favorite haunts. While crossing a 
hard, dry meadow, from one marsh to another, 
on the island of Spesutia,'in October last, we 
came upon numbers of rail which refused to lie 
for the dogs, but rose from among the thin grass 
and flew swiftly off to the rushes, about tWo 
hundred yards distant. When shot in the 
above situations, their crops have invariably 



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138 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

been found to contain minute fragments of 
stone. 

The disposition of the rail is strongly marked 
by petulance and curiosity. Although by no 
means manifesting the restless and spirit-like 
energy which distinguishes the snipe,' they are 
far from being the stupid birds which it has 
pleased some writers, in their infinite wisdom, 
to represent them. Like woodcock, they often 
display ingenuity enough to bafl9^e the sports- 
man, and were it not for the advantage of the 
tides, we should have little or no diversion to 
boast of in rail shooting. They are so inces- 
santly harassed during their stay among us, 
and keep so closely to their coverts at low- 
water, that it is almost impossible to acquire 
any intimate acquaintance with their habits. 
From what has been observed of their domestic 
relations, we have no doubt that in their reedy 
homes, in warmer climes afar, they are sociable 
and frolicsome birds. 

When a person, totally unacquainted with the 
habits of rail, is brought in a light skiff to the 
very edge of the marshes, and informed that 
myriads of the interesting birds which have so 
long attracted the attention of the sportsman and 
the naturalist, are at that moment sleeping, feed- 



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RAIL SHOOTING. 139 

ing, pluming, warring, idling or making love in 
the reeds before him, seeing nothing of these, 
and hearing only the chuck of the black-bird, and 
musical chink of the rice-bunting, he naturally 
asks for ocular proofs of the assertion, unwilling 
to believe, 

" Without the sensible and true ayouch 
Of his own eyes." 

Ridiculing the idea of his inability to put them 
up, if there, perhaps he demands to be landed 
forthwith, and, gun in hand, eagerly pushes his 
way among the reeds, while his more experi- 
enced companion, chuckling to himself, quietly 
lies on his oars to await his return. The first 
soon looses his way in the dense, sultry covert, 
and after some shouting and calling, at last 
makes his appearance again in a very sorry 
plight, covered with marsh-mud, out of breath, 
and more disposed than ever to adhere to his 
heresy ; declaring that while the reeds seemed 
to be alive with other birds, he had been unable, 
after the sharpest scrutiny, to discover even the 
tail-feather of a single rail. Something he did 
see once running swiftly between the reeds; 
but it vanished too quickly for him to say 
whether it was a bird, or a water-rat. After en- 
joying the joke, his friend rows the skiff up one 



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140 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

of the guts of the marsh, and concealing it among 
the reeds, directs the other to draw and rednce 
his charges. This being done, after bidding 
him fix his eyes on a particular spot where the 
tide is leaving the mud bare, he knocks quickly 
with his brass rowlocks on the gunwale of the 
boat. A sharp, peculiar cry, caught up and re- 
peated from a hundred throats, is immediately 
heard, a remarkably neat, trim looking bird in 
a sort of quaker motley, suddenly runs out upon 
the mud, jutting up its tail and erecting its head 
with a curious air, as if to inquire what is 
wanted; — the gun is levelled — the trigger touched, 
and the stranger has "mudded" his first rail. 
He springs up in his ambush in hot haste to 
secure the prize, but his companion, repeating 
his commands to keep quiet, knocks again. The 
small hubbub, consisting of many and rapid re- 
iterations of the monosyllable crek^ again arises ; 
a second bird appears on the same spot, and 
immediately ghares the fate of the first. 

" Now," says the operator, who it appears 
fi-om the pole projecting over the stern and the 
square tin box, carefully stowed away in the 
bow, is to initiate his friend still deeper in the 
mysteries of rail shooting, before the day is 
spent, "now re-load, and when another bird 



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RAIL SHOOTING. 141 

comes out, do not shoot at him at first sight, 
reserve your fire for a moment." 

" And wherefore V 

" You will see," is the reply. 

The experiment is now repeated with similar 
results, except that when the third rail appears, 
after looking inquisitively round, it stoops to 
examine its prostrate companions, and with that 
strange misapprehension of death so often mani- 
fested by the brute creation, begins to make war 
upon the inanimate bodies, striking with bill 
and heels after the manner of a game-cock. 
Perhaps two or three come out upon the 
mud at the same moment ; one struts around the 
dead birds ; another offers amatory caresses ; or 
all join in a sort of mimic battle royal, like so 
many pullets in a barn-yard. They may be all 
killed at a single discharge, but if unmolested 
the contest is speedily ended by one of the party 
whimsically running back to cover in a circuit, 
when the rest immediately follow. 

As the tide continues to recede, the rail follow 
for the purpose of gleaning up the seeds and 
small insects which are left behind, and many 
birds are killed, in the way described, by per- 
sons who station their boats in the guts, just 
after high water. At low water not a single rail 



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142 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES 

is to be seen ; but when the next tide is risen 
sufficiently for the boats to get upon the flats, 
then commences a scene of life and emulation — 
of incessant loading and firing — rof rapid gliding 
hither and thither among the reeds, which, if 
ten or fifteen parties are engaged on the same 
marshes, requires to be seen, to be fully under- 
stood. Let us suppose that the tide, which is 
rising fast, with a stiff breeze from the south-east, 
is as favorable as could be wished, and that the 
moment has arrived when the pushers, laying 
aside their oars, prepare for business, while the 
sportsmen opening their rail-boxes and charging 
their guns, station themselves in a standing posi- 
tion to shoot. The post of the pusher is in the 
stern ; that of the shooter a little abaft the bow. 
Each pusher is stripped to his shirt and panta- 
loons, and holds in his sinewy hands a pine pole 
fifteen feet long, and weighing about four pounds. 
It is his arduous task to flush and retrieve the 
game ; the sportsman has nothing to do but to 
load and shoot. A square tin box, made as small 
as is convenient, and containing in its several 
apartments ammunition, percussion caps and wad- 
ding, lies at the feet of the last. These boxes 
are now both neatly and strongly made; that 
sold by Mr. Krider during the past season was 



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RAIL SHOOTING. US 

by far the best pattern of the kind we have seen. 
Many rail shooters prefer using shot cartridges 
on account of the fraction of time saved in load- 
ing ; others — and we are of the same opinion, 
ourselves — suppose that they can kill more birds 
on a tide with loose shot, and a few, it is said, 
have been hair-brained enough to shoot shot car- 
tridges, made small for the bore of the gun, with 
the charge of powder filled in. These are set 
up in the box before them, the end of the pow- 
der charge being left open, and they drop them 
down the barrels, assisting their descent by a 
stroke of the butt on the footboard of the boat, 
when the gun becomes foul : the use of a load- 
ing-rod is thus dispensed with altogether, and 
an additional fraction of time saved, which, as 
they assert, always tells when rail are thick on 
a fly on a full tide. Many wild stories are afloat 
respecting the wonderful facilities for rapid exe- 
cution afforded by these cartridges; but as nei- 
ther the editor nor the author have been tempted 
to try them, we, of course, cannot vouch for 
their truth. We still adhere to our loading-rods, 
which are made several inches longer than the 
barrels to admit the full grasp of the hand, and 
sufficiently stout to be driven home at a single 
effort. A common ram-rod is inadmissible into 



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144 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

this kind of shooting, in which dexterity and 
despatch in loading are necessary to the full en- 
joyment of the sport. 

As the different boats enter the reeds at vari- 
ous favorable points, we will first notice that fat, 
angry looking gentleman in the blue skiff, with 
the one-eyed, quizzical genius at the stern. The 
fat gentleman is a tyro, as clumsy as a cow in the 
boat, and a very indifferent shot. He is more- 
over exceedingly irascible and seems to suffer 
much in his unusual position, while the blinking 
scamp behind him is as cool as a snow-ball. 
There has already been some sparring between 
them respecting the price of the tide, and the 
pusher, who is not without his slice of humor, 
has made up his mind to victimize his quondam 
employer. This is easy enough when one is in 
his element, and the other out of it, and woe to 
that fat gentleman who has been tempted, in an 
evil hour, to leave trade and come out for sport ; 
for the other, incensed at his attempt to jew him 
down, is determined to make sport of him. 

The skiff glides smoothly in among the reeds, 
the pusher on the qui vive for mischief, while the 
shooter maintaining his equilibrium as well as 
he can, commends himself to his dignity and 
keeps a sharp look out. 



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RAIL SHOOTING. 145 

" Now," says the roguish pusher, gently lift- 
ing and inserting his pole into the mud as the 
skiff shoots into a thick growth of reeds, " Now, 
sir, left leg forward — right leg behind — stand 
steady — shoot quick — load fast, and leave the 
rest to me. Mark !" 

"Bang! bang!" 

A Yer^ palpable miss each time, and the bird 
which has risen directly in front within a few 
feet of the boat, flutters slowly over the tops of 
the reeds, with its legs hanging loosely down, 
and almost instantly drops out of sight again, 
while the unfortunate marksman, thrown vio- 
lently from his centre of gravity by a sudden 
treacherous movement of the skiff, stumbles for- 
ward over his rail box, and catching at the gun- 
wale, pitches head foremost, gun and all, over 
the bow. 

" Why bless my soul I" exclaims the villainous 
author of the catastrophe, with a great show of 
surprise, " I never seed the likes. Did you do 
that on purpose, sir ? You're the very quickest 
gentleman out of a boat, I ever pushed. You 
hit that rail too: I seed him drop his legs." 

" Go to the devil !" exclaims the fat gentleman, 
wiping his face and clambering back into the 
boat in high wrath. 



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146 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

"Load up, sir, load up," answers the fellow 
coolly ; " there is no time to tell fortunes now. 
Look, sir, yonder comes Dennis Welsh and Bill 
Stam pushing side by side." 

"D n Bill Starn!" mutters the other, 

wiping off his gunlocks with a white handker- 
chief 

" It's no use, sir, a breakwater wouldn't stop 
the nigger. See how he ploughs through the 
reeds like a steamboat. Ready, sir?" 

" No, I ain't, you one-eyed scoundrel," growls 
the tyro, fumbling at the lids of his box which 
have been jammed into the partition by his fall. 

" Well, sir, no hurry ; its my place to wait 
upon you ; if you've no pertikler rejection, I'll 
tell you a story as how I lost my eye while 
you're cleaning off the mash mud." 

" You're an impudent son of a ," exclaims 

the exasperated shooter, entirely losing sight of 
his breeding. 

" Pshaw, sir," replies the fellow, leaning on 
his pole as coolly as before, " it's despurit hard 
work for two dogs in one collar to pull different 
ways. Besides the story'U make ^ou laugh in 
spite of yourself, and you'll be sartin to kill the 
next bird. Once upon a time — " 

" I tell you what," interrupts the fat gentle- 



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RAIL SHOOTING. 147 

man, with savage deliberation, " if you tell that 
story, I'll see you hanged before I pay you a 
copper, sport or no sport." 

" Sir," says the pusher in turn, " I hope you 
won't be offinded, but I must tell you this much 
of it — I wore my eye out as the cat did her's, 
watching th^ mice." 

" Now," retorts the other, who has at length 
managed to re-charge his piece, " now mind you, 
fellow, if you give me — " 

" Hush !" exclaims the pusher, pointing and 
staring in his energetic way at some object on 
his right hand ; " shoot, sir, shoot." 

The fat gentleman starts, and catching a 
glimpse of something swimming among the 
reeds, levels his gun and fires both barrels. 

" Hurrah !" shouts the pusher, frantically be- 
taking himself to his pole, " you've pinked him — 
you've settled his hash — you've mortalized your- 
self on this mash." 

"What is it?" demands the shooter in a state 
of great excitement. 

" What is it !" repeats the pusher, with a 
glorious assumption of scorn, as he brings the 
stern of the skiff to the spot, and carefully lifts 
up the object by the tail; " you isn't much 
lamed in Natarel History, is you, sir?" 



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14S KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

"Why, no, not particularly," answers the 
worthy cit, flushing still more. 

"I thought not," says the pusher, shaking his 
head and blinking awfully at the animal in his 
hand, " well then, sir, I has to inform you that 
you has done what no other man has parformed 
in this here river for fifty years — you has killed 
a young otter." 

" No !" exclaims the other, staring hard in his 
turn at the rogue's face, who stands the inquir- 
ing gaze like a monument. 

" Fact, sir, and now whether you pays me for 
this here tide's shove or no, you're sartin to 
figure in the Daily Ledger, the Sun, and all the 
weeklies, not to speak of the New York 
Spurrit." 

'* But is this really an otter, my good fellow?" 
says the shooter. 

'* Sartainly it be ; I seed many a one in the 
far west." (The mendacious rascal had proba- 
bly never been west of the Schuylkill in his life.) 
"Has you any acquaintance among the homo- 
thology chaps, sir ?" Does you know any of the 
great skin-stufFers?" 

" Why, no, I can't say that I do," answered 
the fat gentleman, regaining his complacency 
fast. 



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RAIL SHOOTING. 149 

" It'll cost you ten dollars, at least, treating 
the house, when we come in ; but in course you 
won't mind that," says the pusher. 

^^ The devil !" exclaims the shooter. 

" I'll go a quart of Davy Hunter's best on it, 
myself. Lay it up in the bow, sir, where it'll 
have a chance to dry. If old Mr. Peale were 
alive now, he'd ring down dollars for that ere 
spissimin." 

" I'll tell you what, my man," says the gentle- 
man, "d n the birds! I dare say that I 

shouldn't kill many — just put me quietly ashore 
at the ferry, and say nothing of this to no 
one ; I'll pay you your charge, but, mind ye, 
do you keep mum until I'm on my way to the 
city." 

" But they'll never believe me, sir; they'se a 
mighty suspicious set at that 'ere ferry : they'll 
swear I'm a bigger liar than Tom Pepper," says 
the pusher. 

" But you forget the papers," says the fat 
gentleman, chuckling. 

" Right, sir, my name is Shoemaker ; I should 
like to go in with you, if you've no express 
rejection. I'm not 'zactly a candydate for fame, 
but seeing my name in print, may put an extra 
job in my way." 
10 



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150 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

" Well see — we'll see," says the gentleman 
briskly ; " put her head about." 

The pusher obeys with seeming reluctance, 
and upon arriving at the ferry, receives his hire 
and a shilling extra to treat himself, while the 
fat gentleman, completely hocus-pocussed, wraps 
the mine carefully up in his handkerchief, and 
calling for his carriage, hurries away with his 
prize. 

Let us now return to the marsh; observe that 
tall, athletic negro who is pushing the gentleman 
in the green skiff; see how he plies his pole like 
a plaything, forcing the boat ahead with a 
velocity which bears down every thing before 
him, while so artistically is she worked, that 
when a bird rises her motion is as steady as that 
of a swimming swan. His white competitor in 
the batteau is our old acquaintance Dennis 
Welsh ; mark how easily and smoothly he makes 
his way among the reeds, his man standing 
steadily as a statue. It is evident from the style 
which these two boats are propelled, and in 
which the shooters knock down the game, that 
the men are all crack hands at the sport. There 
is a marked difference, however, in the modes of 
pushing. The black. Bill Stam, as he is called, 
careers over the marsh, like a wild horse on a 



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RAIL SnOOTING. 151 

prairie, putting up birds on all sides and keeping 
his man busy, while Dennis^ who is at home on 
every foot of the flat, glides along steadily and 
evenly, flushing a bird at every boat's length, as 
he edges gradually in towards the bank with the 
rise of the tide. At one time four birds are on a 
fly for each boat, nearly at the same moment; 
two are shot from the batteau, which, according 
to agreement, carries but one gun, and three 
from the skiff, which is privileged to use two. 
These birds fall among the thickest of the reeds, 
but being fairly hit they are all found. Bill 
shows his teeth and rolls his eyes among the 
reeds like a wild beast ; he sees like a hawk 
and moves like the wind. He boats his dead 
birds, is off again, and has two more down in a 
moment. One of these, however, is crippled and 
although the wild pusher strikes directly at it, 
the bird evades the blow by disappearing under 
water, while Bill, with a wild, African shout, 
thrashing the reeds with his pole, continues his 
career. Dennis follows more slowly, but as the 
wind continues to rise with the tide, it is to be 
seen that he keeps his man on a steadier level, 
partly owing -to the flat bottom of the batteau, 
and partly to his long experience in pushing. 
He flushes bird after bird as he advances, his 



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152 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

man shooting the instant the gun touches his 
shoulder, and invariably riddling his bird. At 
length while the skiff is still traversing the high 
reeds, the batteau enters a space of about a half 
an acre, covered with a species of water-weed 
bearing a profusion of yellow flowers. There is 
just water enough upon it to float the batteau 
easily, so well has the pusher hit his time. The 
boat first takes the edges of the space in a wide, 
circling sweep. Not a bird rises. *' Bad show, 
Dennis," says the sportsman. But Dennis knows 
better, and still continuing his course but con- 
tracting its circle, the rail at last begin to show 
themselves. Three are killed successively, and 
two more the instant after. " Let them lie," 
says the old stager, waxing warm and plying his 
pole like lightening; "kill them dead, sir, and 
they won't move." The game now rise so fast 
from among these yellow flowers, that the 
shooter's dexterity in loading comes first into 
play, and, it must be acknowledged, he shows 
himself an adept. Sixteen birds are down at 
one time, and being killed according to the 
pusher's instructions, he does not lose a feather. 
In this comparatively small space of the marsh, 
thirty-six birds are boated, not a rail being 
missed, or pinioned, or escaping Welsh's sharp 
eyes after being knocked down. 



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RAIL SHOOTING. 153 

In the mean time the skiff is nearly lost sight 
of among at least a dozen others, which, from 
the rapid and continued firing, appeared to be 
having good sport. It is to be noticed, however, 
that Bill's man begins to shoot with less certainty 
than before, and that the second gun is less 
frequently brought into requisition. The rail 
also seem to display more life upon the wing ; 
they fly swifter and farther. The wind has 
increased to a half a gale, and a portion of the 
rest of the shooters are observed to be making 
bad work. 

" The tide will be up to the top of the bank, 
sir," says Bill, "but the daylight will hardly 
last it out." 

"Aye," answers the shooter, "we must get 
further in : the water is driving the birds towards 
the meadows." 

At this moment a report like that of a six 
pounder is heard among the boats, followed by a 
dense cloud of smoke. Some shooter has blown 
up his rail box. On goes Bill without giving 
the accident a second thought ; but the indefati- 
gable Dennis is there before him, and now com- 
mences a trial of sportsmanship between the two 
boats, which is exciting enough when viewed 
*from the bank. They are pushing side and side 



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154 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

within fifty yards of each other, flushing a:nd 
dropping their game in a style not to be excelled. 
Bill manages his boat beautifully under the cir- 
cumstances, and his man shoots now remarkably 
well. But his opponent is equally sure, and the 
extraordinary rapidity with which Dennis spins 
the batteau, as it were, on her heel, in retrieving 
a bird which has fallen afar on either hand, 
while the skiff is obliged to push stern foremost, 
or to make a curve line for the same purpose, 
gives the first a slight but decided advantage. 

" Hurrah, Dennis !" shouts a fellow in a third 
boat, as two double shots successively occur to 
the batteau; "old Grey steel forever!" 

Looking at the man we at once recognize our 
ci-devant original who *^done" with the fat gen- 
tleman on the first of the tide. He has now 
another jolly-looking shooter in charge, a very 
different person, however, for we see at once it 
is our friend Major F. who, although last on the 
marsh, we will wager a dozen, will not come off 
least. A moment after two birds spring and 
cross, and are killed from the skiff at a single 
shot. 

" Hurrah !" shouts a United States officer from 
the fort, waving his cap, ** that is what I call 
sport." 



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RAIL SHOOTING. 165 

A flock of teal, with the singular temerity 
which sometimes marks the flight of these dainty 
little ducks, now shoot across the meadow and 
wheel directly over the boats. Neither shooter 
gives the least token of their presence, and Den- 
nis's man kills a king rail, which happened to 
rise at the moment, as expeditiously as ever. 
The Major being under no such restrictions does 
not fail to salute the unexpected visitors right 
and left, dropping three with one barrel and two 
with the second. Well done, Major; we have 
had a taste of your sportsmanship ; we have seen 
a specimen of your shooting before. The con- 
test is continued till the sun sinks on the scene, 
and the shades of evening drive the boats from 
the flats, just as the tide begins to fall. On 
counting the game, it is found that one numbers 
a hundred and four and the other ninety-seven 
birds. It was a tight match, and the batteau 
has beaten the skiff by seven birds. 

Such animated scenes as this, gentle reader, 
varied by other incidents, occasionally of a serious 
nature, occur upon the flats of the Delaware and 
Schuylkill every day during the season, when 
the state of the tide will permit. They continue 
for four or five weeks, when the rail suddenly 
migrate at night, and as the reed birds generally 



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156 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

depart before, the marshes are comparatively 
silent and deserted; the reeds wither and are 
beaten down by the equinoctial gales, and as the 
season advances, the flats assume their old bleak 
and desolate aspect, relieved only by the appear- 
ance of the crow and the wild duck, or by that 
of some solitary snipe shooter slowly traversing 
the drifts with his dog. 

Before concluding this article, we would 
mention that rail have been and are still hunted 
on foot, on the flood tide. We remember re- 
peatedly to have seen our old acquaintance. 
Major Deadshot, wading up to his middle on 
the Broad Marsh, with his dogs, Bob and Dash, 
swimming around him, and upon more occa- 
sions than one, on a scant tide, he has been 
known to bring in more birds than ''the best 
boat." We are informed that he has killed his 
usual quantum of rail in this way during the 
past season, and excepting that his famous dogs 
have gone the way of all flesh, he is still the 
same veritable Major Deadshot, upon whom we 
looked with undisguised reverence, when shoot- 
ing had an undefined and mysterious fascina- 
tion for us, in the happy days of our boyhood. 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 

THE AMERICAN PARTRIDGE— PERDIX VIRGINIANUS. 

Description, — " The American partridge is nine 
inches long, and fourteen in extent ; the biU is 
black; line over the eye, down the neck, and 
whole chin, pure white, bounded by a band of 
black, which descends and spreads broadly over 
the throat ; the eye is dark hazel ; crown, neck 
and upper parts of the breast, red brown ; sides 
of the neck, spotted with black and white on a 
reddish brown ground ; back, scapulars and les- 
ser coverts, red brown, intermixed with ash, and 
sprinkled with black; tertials, edged with yel- 
lowish white; wings plain dusky; lower parts 
of the breast and belly, pale yellowish white, 
beautifully marked with numerous curving spots, 
or arrowheads of black ; tail, ash, sprinkled with 
reddish brown ; legs, very pale ash. The female 
differs from the male in having the chin and 
sides of the head yellowish brown." 

The young broods are fit for the sport by the 
twentieth of October, and although inferior to 



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158 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

their parents in stratagy, fly to cover with equal 
swiftness and less appearance of labor. They 
are, however, incapable of sustaining long flights, 
easier brought down, and less fleet on their legs 
when winged. When cornered by the dog, they 
sometimes utter a shrill squeak. They are more 
apt to crouch at the approach of danger than the 
old birds, and when scattered by the sportsman 
make for the nearest shelter, where they keep 
silent for a time, but soon show their desire to 
re-assemble by calling and answering each other 
from different parts of the covert. Their signal 
notes on these occasions are soft, plaintive and 
peculiarly expressive of anxiety. The old birds 
fly further and deeper into the woods, preserve a 
wary silence for many moments together, and 
are only to be traced to their hiding places by 
the keen nose of your four-footed advuvant. 

Inasmuch as we observe the partridge invari- 
ably taking to cover, when flushed by sportsmen 
or pursued by birds of prey, and, in fact, passing 
most of its time near its edge, we might at first 
glance imagine that the same instinct would lead 
it to select its place of repose in the deep shade 
of the thicket. Such, however, is not the case. 
We know that it roosts in the open fields, but 
never in the same enclosure in which it feeds, 
unless it be of unusual extent. 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 159 

After having filled their crops, towards eve- 
ning they make a single flight from the stubbles 
to the spot selected for the roost, on which they 
alight in a body, nestle close, and stir not again 
until dawn. Although frequently found in the 
narrow strips of grass which the mowers leave 
in a line with the fence, they are careful to avoid 
roosting near these, and to choose, as near as 
possible, the very centre of the field. These facts 
are strongly illustrative of the self-preservative 
instinct, sharpened into intelligence by the diffe- 
rent dangers, to which, sleeping or waking, the 
bird is continually exposed. To escape from 
man and other enemies who pursue them by 
day, they pitch hurriedly into bush or thicket ; 
but when the stealthy prowlers of the wood are 
abroad, the covey, sitting on an elevated spot 
in the middle of the field, in a circle of less than 
twelve inches in diameter, sleep comparatively 
secure under the wing of night. 

But there is yet another fact connected with 
the roost, which challenges our attention. Many 
of the feathered tribes bury their heads in their 
plumage on the approach of evening. Even the 
restless searbird, which, it has been said, never 
sleeps, has been seen riding the wild waves with 
its head under its wing. But the partridge after 



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160 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

all its ingenious care to conceal its resting place 
from nocturnal foes, manifests no such sense of 
security. The roost is ranged with strict refe- 
rence to the dangers which, in some degree, 
menace it still. It is kno^vn that the head of 
each bird is turned outwards, forming, so to 
speak, a continuous ring of posts, while the tails 
touch, so that each living segment of that little 
circular camp of innocents, is ready to start and 
shift for itself, at the least thrill of alarm. 

There is thought to be an appreciable diffe- 
rence in the sizes of the male and female par- 
tridges. Occasionally an old cock bird is killed 
whose weight is worthy of registry. In some 
parts of upper Pennsylvania where the birds are 
little disturbed, we have 'found both of unusual 
size. During the shooting season the yearling 
broods are readily known by their inferiority in 
this respect, and young birds are always to be 
distinguished from old ones by their smooth, 
tender, light-colored legs. The legs of the old 
birds are black and covered with scales. The 
partridge is found in almost every section of the 
Union, but it is principally in the Eastern and 
Middle States, and in some sections of Maryland 
and Virginia, that it is considered game and sys- 
tematically hunted with dogs. 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 161 

Many of our senior readers will, doubtless, 
remember the time, when the prospect of a day's 
partridge shooting was sweeter to their youthful 
fancies, than the mellifluous sound of the Ionian 
dialect, a high standard class circular, or even a 
July vacation. Others, again, like the editor, 
will confess that their ardor in this species of 
sport was never so intense, as when hunting 
woodcocks in their marshy solitudes — starting 
before the peep of day to set decoys for the 
wild duck, or with Ponto and Dash, after 
breakfast, to beat up the haunts of the wild 
and wandering snipe. It was only during the 
last season, while shooting over the wooded 
hills near Green Lane, in the upper part of 
Montgomery, that we were conscious of a 
slight thrill of jealousy, when our companion 
unexpectedly killed, towards the close of day, 
a brace of fine snipe on a wet stubble-field. 
We did not dream at the moment, of encoun- 
tering our arch favorite on the very summit 
of a bleak ridge, on the twenty-ninth day of 
November; and as the shooter complacently 
smoothed down the plumage of the birds, and 
carefully dropped them in the innermost recess 
of his shooting coat, the action went to our 
heart. Truth to tell, it cost us a struggle to 



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162 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

subdue the sinful feeling, it was so very like 
coquetting with our first love. We had no 
previous reason to be malcontent, having shot 
over many points that day at partridge and 
ruflfed grouse ; nevertheless, had we fallen in 
with that brace of snipe as the sun went down, 
we should have restored the guu to its case 
with a tranquil mind; we should have ridden 
home by the light of the moon, and blessed 
our auspicious stars. 

But, be it remembered at the outset, that we 
profess no^ desire to disparage the merits of this 
delectable sport, in which, una voce, most shooters 
glory. It has irresistible charms for young and 
old, and as long as King Nimrod — we had nearly 
said Ramrod — has a place in the hearts of men— r 
as long as Ponto and Dash can distinguish a 
stubble-field from a stable-yard — so long will 

" The pointer range, and the sportsman beat;'' 

SO long will it be considered as the beau ideal of 
field shooting. The partridge has been so long 
and so closely identified with scenes of rural 
study, and rural industry, and has been so 
minutely described, that its habits would seem 
to be perfectly familiar to the public. Sports* 
men differ, however, as to several points in the 
history of its economy, and, according to Mr. 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 163 

Herbert, it will be long before even the question 
of its true ornithological title is settled. "The 
difficulty," says that gentleman, "lies not so 
much in the delicacy of the subject itself, as in 
the utter want' of sporting authority in America 
competent to pronounce a decree." With due 
deference to Mr. Herbert, we would remark that 
it is not at all likely that he, himself, will be 
soon called to the task, since with all his research 
and experience in the field, he has already made 
a curious blunder of pronouncing the American 
partridge, a quail, to which it really bpars little 
analogy, as our townsman. Dr. E. J. Lewis, of 
Philadelphia, in his Hints to Sportsmen, page 
forty-seven, has conclusively shown. This error 
is more remarkable, inasmuch as however fan- 
ciful Forrester may be in his description of the 
modus operandi of killing a brace of wild ducks, 
right and left, from behind a pair of fast trotting 
nags going at speed, he is generally correct in 
his appreciation of the habits of the bird which 
he professes to portray. One of the mooted 
points in the history of the partridge, is the 
number of broods which each pair of old birds 
produce in a season; another relates to what 
has been rather unadvisably called the mys- 
terious faculty of withholding its scent, when 



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164 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

hiding away from the dogs. The first, although 
of some little interest to the naturalist, is of still 
less to the sportsman, except, indeed, when a 
scarcity of game has been experienced, as in 
the last season, — during which the gunsmiths 
of Philadelphia sold less small shot than they 
have done for years, — and as furnishing a topic 
for learned discussion on each annual campaign, 
after his triumphant return from the woods and 
stubbles. The other more nearly concerns the 
shooter and his abettors, especially the intel- 
lectual nqse of Ponto, and is more curious in its 
phrases, even when stript of the mystical air 
with which some writers of the day would invest 
it. In regard to the first point, we would ob- 
serve, that although the partridge displays more 
art in the process of nidification than the wood- 
cock, yet from the comparatively late period of 
her incubation, and from obvious causes con- 
nected with agricultural pursuits, the nest of 
the former is much more frequently found than 
that of the latter bird. They are also more 
jealous of intrusion, and more apt to abandon 
the nest when disturbed. The mere flashing 
her in this situation, is often resented by an 
entire and immediate desertion of the spot, 
which, for weeks previous, perhaps, had been 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 165 

the object of her especial solicitude. Should 
the eggs be handled, it is very rare indeed that 
the bird is again s6en on the nest. It would 
almost seem, that in the mysteries of nature's 
ordering, the process of incubation of this fami- 
liar bird must be carried on in entire silence 
and solitude ; as if the little temple of woven grass 
and leaves, not to speak profanely, were a very 
sanctum sanctorum^ not to be desecrated by 
other eyes than those of its priestess. When, 
however, it is once abandoned, the bird does not 
immediately proceed to lay again, as might, at 
first glance, be supposed. An interval of some 
days and even weeks may elapse, during which 
she may be daily seen sitting listlessly on a 
fence-rail for many moments at a time, while 
other more fortunate mothers are already lead- 
ing about their callow broods. The male closely 
attends his mate, and would seem, by his silence 
and drooping attitude, to share in her dejection 
of spirits. At length, however, another place 
of concealment is sought for, and another nest 
made; should the same fate attend this which 
befell the first, we have reason to believe that, 
after a second interval, greater or less, the bird 
will lay again, and her brood, perhaps not more 
than one-third grown, will be found by the 
11 



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166 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANEGDOTES. 

sportsman as late as the middW of October, or 
even in November. In fact, so paany accidental 
irregularities occur in the- period of incubation, 
that the farmer will often tell you, that he has 
seen broods of unfledged birds in his first crop 
of grass, in his oats, in his wheat, in his corn 
and, last of all, in his buckwheat. We were 
long inclined to the popular belief, that as a 
law of her instinct, the partridge reared two 
broods in a season, but later observations have 
inclined us to correct our opinion. These 
inquiries were principally made in a section of 
the country where we have resided for years, 
and shot over for many successive seasons, a sec- 
tion where partridges are comparatively scarce, 
and which we believe, to be better suited for the 
purposes of investigation, than a region where 
they are unusually abundant In the latter 
locality, so many late broods, consequent upon 
the irregularities we have already noticed, will 
always be met with in the shooting season, 
that distinct broods will be confounded together 
by sportsmen as the progeny of one pair of old 
birds, especially when from accident or design, 
one or more of these coveys of young birds have 
been deprived of the fostering care of a parent. 
In various sections of the Middle States, especi- 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 167 

ally in the valleys of Pennsylvania, it is not a 
very rare occurrence for the dogs to point two 
and even three coveys of different sizes in the 
same field, and the shooter, observing, perhaps, 
but one pair of old birds rise in this promiscu- 
ous progeny, at once jumps at his conclusion of 
two broods in a season. It is not thus, however, 
that assertions are to be advanced and facts 
established in the history of a bird so jealous of 
its more occult habits and so impatient of con- 
finement as the partridge. Still the difficulty 
of obtaining an amount of information which 
may be relied on, and of keeping a continuous 
watch upon several pair of old birds, even in a 
part of the country where the haunts of every 
covey, for miles around, are perfectly well 
known, almost precludes the possibility of decid- 
ing the question. On the whole, we are inclined 
to think that the partridge, like the woodcock, 
as a law of her nature, rears but one brood in 
a year. 

The cock bird relieves the hen at least once 
during the day, and nestles close to her at night. 
Indeed, he seldom wanders far from the nest, 
and from the period of pairing until the young 
birds are able to fly, is as attentive to his family 
duties as the turtle-dove or the domstic pigeon. 



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168 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

What is asserted of the English partridge, is 
doubtless true of our own, that when once paired 
they rarely separate. It is well known that the 
partridge may be reared in the barn-yard. In 
the fall of eighteen hundred and fifty, we saw 
one of a brood which had been brought up in 
this manner by a bantam hen. It was then full 
grown and quietly feeding with the chickens. 
The experiment has also been reversed, by 
placing the eggs of the common hen under the 
partridge. In this case the result was more 
curious, as the brood of chickens thus produced 
had all the wild habits of young partridges. In 
commenting upon this change, Wilson, the 
father of American ornithology, reasonably ob- 
serves that "there is scarcely a doubt that the 
domestic fowl might be very soon brought back 
to its original savage state, and thereby supply 
another additional subject for the amusement of 
the sportsman. But," he adds, " the experi- 
ment, in order to secure its success, must be 
made in a quarter of the country less exposed 
than ours to the ravages of guns, traps, dogs, 
and the deep snows of winter, that the new 
tribe might have full time to become completely 
naturalized, and well fixed in their native 
habits." This reminds us of an adventure of a 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 169 

friend of ours, who, with a companion, had 
what was termed rarie sport, in hunting a brood 
of guinea fowls, which had been hatched and 
gone wild in the woods of New Jersey. There 
was an abundance of brush, and the birds laid 
well after their first fright, and were all killed 
over points.* 

In some parts of the old world where game 
are strictly preserved, the disposition of the do- 
mestic fowl to relapse into a wild state has often 
been noticed. An anecdote of the kind was 
related to us several years ago by the son of a 
deceased oherjagermeister of the Duke of Hesse 
D'Armstadt. A common hen had hatched out 
a brood of twenty chicks in a remote part of the 
park, and when discovered, both the mother 
and her progeny, which w^ere nearly full grown, 

* We once shot for several seasons with a pet pointer, who would 
stand any bird to which his attention was particularly directed, 
from a small sand-piper to a tame turkey. It was very apparent, 
however, from the comic look which his countenance assumed, that 
Toby comprehended the matter, entering into the spirit of the 
frolic merely in obedience to his master's whims, and that in his 
unrestrained, sober moods, he considered such foolery as entirely 
beneath the line of his business. To cats, indeed, he had an 
undisguised aversion, and would hunt them through the stable- 
yard, or stand them staunchly in the field. Nothing appeared to 
rejoice his heart more, than to be in at the death of a vagrant cat 
detected in a poaching expedition, and if allowed to take q. morsel 
of her hair, he asked nothing further of fate. 



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170 KRIDBR'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

were as wild as pheasants. They were all shot 
over pointers by the huntsman, with the excep- 
tion of two or three killed on the trees. It is to 
be supposed, however, that wild chicken shoot- 
ing would prove no better sport than knocking 
over pinnated grouse on the prairies, which, 
according to report, is but tame work, and 
although the complete domestication of the par- 
tridge would be a feather in the cap of the 
naturalist, yet upon due consideration, the 
sportsman will do well to leave the barn-fowl 
in quiet possession of roost and dunghill. 

Besides the shooter who annually goes out 
to brace mind and body in this exciting sport, 
the little partridge has many orthodox enemies, 
so to speak. Piratical hawks" are constantly 
cruising the air round its haunts ; the fox, the 
raccoon and the snake, each has its snatch at 
the broods ; while the farmer's boy, with his 
Birmingham barrel and cock-tailed cur, or his 
deadly figure-four, betraying whole coveys, at a 
fail, to his remorseless clutch, makes war upon 
them early and late. Even grimalkin, when 
tired of mousing in the barn or dining off of 
scraps, will slyly creep away fo the field or 
thicket, to set up her failing appetite on poached 
game. For every arrow head on its dotted 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 171 

breast the partridge has its foe, to say nothing 
of such a winter as that preceding the last. 
Living in the country, it gives us pleasure to 
say, that every year we do something in the 
way of lessening its enemies, by shooting, trap- 
ping, or breaking up the nests of hawks, hunt- 
ing the fox and the coon, smashing the traps, 
bamboozling the boy, and conspiring against 
the cock-tailed cur. As to grimalkin, woe unto 
her, should we once catch a glimpse of her 
furred skin skulking in the hedge, or crouching 
in the grass from the dogs. Not all the war- 
locks in weird-land — not all the carlins which 
chased Tam O'Shanter, could avert her doom 
for a single instant. Bleed she must, be she 
brindle, tortoise shell, black, white, yellow, or 
gray, and as wise in her moods as Whittington's 
or that of my lord Marquis of Carrabas. 

'^ Swift from the tube the leaden yengeance flies, 
And Ponto laughs as poaching pussy dies/^ 

There is scarcely a season passes but we are 
called upon to add another tail or two to the 
talley. Last year we shot a torn amopg the 
cedars on Stone Hill, grouse hunting, no doubt, 
and on returning home were forced to inflict 
thB penalty of the law upon another, a splendid 
fellow, the very minion of a nursery hearth-rug, 



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172 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

the miniature Bengal tiger of an old fashioned 
fire-fender ; — but such is the perversity of feline 
nature, — twice detected in the act of stealing 
young Shanghai chickens from the coops. On 
another occasion, while shooting near Dennis- 
ville, New Jersey, the dog pointed what we at 
first supposed, from his look and attitude, to be a 
hare. In an instant, however, moving on his 
length, he stood stiffly. Getting sight of Miss 
Puss stealing away through the rails of the 
fence, we discharged one barrel at her and the 
other at one of her intended victims as they 
rose, and we are happy to be able to state, that 
even-handed justice gave a tolerably fair ac- 
count of both. The birds were dusting and 
pruning their plumage in the bushy point of a 
wood ; puss was evidently watching their mo- 
tions, premeditating a glorious pounce, when 
Ponto, winding the game, pointed her and her 
unconscious prey at the same moment. The 
old fellow was not at all confused by the two 
scents, and showed his satisfaction at the result 
by looking up in his master's face with eager 
eyes, begging for a single shake. When gravely 
reminded that this was decidedly out of charac- 
ter, he solaced himself by wagging his wiry tail, 
while his countenance wore that knowing, imp- 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 173 

ish look, which a hard-faced "urchin might be 
supposed to assume, when rubbing his hands 
in high glee at some unexpected piece of fun. 

The fox will trail a running covey, just as a 
wolf follows " a gang of turkies," by the scent. 
A medical gentleman was reading under a large 
shell-bark tree, the lower branches of which 
formed a complete circle of shade, when he 
observed a fox coursing like a dog in the same 
field. After running with his nose down for 
some moments, he suddenly sprang into the 
hollow of a stump, out of which at the same 
instant flew a covey of full grown partridges. 
Reynard, however, secured one with which he 
beat a retreat to a rocky hill in the vicinity. 
This occurred in the month of September at 
mid-day, and considerably astonished the doc- 
tor. 

So many useful instructions have been else- 
where given to the young shooter, that we have 
little to say on this score, except to beg him to 
remember, that he has no more right to feel 
flurried in the field, than in the drawing-room. 
"A gentleman," says Lord Chesterfield, or 
somebody else, " may be in haste, but he never 
should be in a hurry." The same rule is strictly 
applicable to sporting, and the bungler who 



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174 KRIDBR'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

y 

interferes with the shots that fall to his com- 
panion, or bangs both barrels not at selected 
birds, nor in reality at the covey, but rather at 
the whir of their short wings as they rise before 
the dogs, is equally unfortunate with the man 
who publicly commits some egregious breach of 
the formula of common politeness. If, however, 
as is often the case, the shooter finds himself 
unable to control his nervousness at the critical 
moment when the dogs are on a point, we advise 
him to hunt a season or two with an experienced 
sportsman, when, by observing his motions, 
and listening to his directions in the field, he 
will gradually get the better of his own undue 
excitement, and kill his birds in style. We 
have known several individuals of excitable 
temperaments, who have been cured in this 
way, and now shoot right and left quite as well 
as their ci-devant tutors. A vast deal of the 
interest which attaches itself to partridge shoot- 
ing, depends upon the manner in which it is 
pursued, and there is no s])ort which admits of 
more system in its practice. If your dogs are 
excellent, and your companion one whose tem- 
per and habits in the field chime well with your 
own, you will say, perhaps, that it is the most 
delightful of sports. Like other varieties of 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 175 

shooting, it induces cheerfulness — throws care 
to the winds — strengthens the body, and by- 
giving fresh tone to the mind when overtasked 
by business, sends the sportsman back to his 
office, or counting-room, with a new lease of 
existence. It is the greatest possible service to 
thousands of persons engaged in the arduous 
pursuit of professions, which require intense 
abstraction, and who would inevitably break down 
if deprived of their usual relaxations in the 
shooting seasons. *^ Black care," says the Latin 
poet, "sits behind the flying horseman;" but 
who ever heard of care striding over the fields 
and through the woods with the sportsman ! As 
the poet has his own world, within the mysterious 
precincts of which the rest of mankind are not 
privileged to enter, so the sportsman has his 
separate existence which no one is permitted to 
share, save Ponto, without whom, indeed we 
could do nothing, and who, we are. proud to say, 
belongs to the order. Now dullards, wiseacres 
and clodpates, stand afar off* and scoff" both at 
the poet and the sportsman. ** Sblood," as Hamlet 
says, "there is something in this more than 
natural, if philosophy could find it out." 

We should like, however, in the neatest way 
possible, — being very studious to avoid giving 



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176 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

oflfence, — to remind the Rev. William Henry 
Herbert and his followers^we ask Forrester's 
pardon if we have inadvertently confounded him 
with the sporting clergy — to remind these gen- 
tlemen, we repeat, that it is not exactly in char- 
acter to prate too much at this season about 
"western breezes" — 'Horrent rays of mellow, 
liquid lustre"-;-'* gay woodlands" — " wreaths of 
purple light," &c., — because, we would gently, 
insinuate, that it is by no means the dreamy 
skies and scenic glories of an American autumn, 
which makes it so dear to the partridge shooter, 
with "hie-away!" and "to-ho!" on his tongue. 
He has little leisure, we opine, to court a 
humorous sadness in the sunlight of its golden 
noons, while his dogs are feathering actively 
before him, and still less to dwell with rapturous 
melancholy on the gorgeous dyes of the forest, 
while marking down the scattered birds in a 
briar bush, or watching them skim away in a 
sylvan alley. How, we would in all courtesy 
ask, how can he stop to seek food for thought in 
the rustle of a sere maize-leaf, when Ponto is on 
a trail in the furrow, or how, in the name of Pan 
and all the wood-nymphs, can he hearken to the 
whistling of the November blast, when the seduc- 
tive call of " Bob White," has graver charms for 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 177 

his ears, than the sweet south's sighing over- 
tures, or all old autumn's ^olian music. 

" Full of the expected sport my heart beats high, 
As with impatient steps I haste to reach 
The stubbles, where the scattered grain affords 
A sweet repast to the yet heedless game. 
Near yonder hedge-row where high grass and ferns 
The secret hollow shade, my pointers stand, 
How beautiful they look I with outstretched tails, 
With heads immovable and eyes fast fixed, 
One fore leg raised and bent, the other firm. 
Advancing forward, presses on the ground.'' 

This is the language of an enthusiastic sports- 
man, talking in blank verse, and, with the ex- 
ception of the last line, is as it should be. He 
says not a word, you perceive, about the beau- 
ties of the season ; all is merged in the sporting 
picture before him. He is an Englishman, it is 
true, poor fellow, and the autumns of his country 
are rather brown affairs ; but the fact is, the rise 
and fall of empires is nought to him, at that 
precious moment when his " pointers stand ;" 
and it is this vivid filling up of the scene, this 
direct and glorious presentation of itself, to the 
utter exclusion of all other objects, together with 
a lurking love for gunpowder, which places the 
modem Nimrod in a charmed circle, and gives 
its fascination to the, sport. "How beautiful 
they look !" By the way, an excellent rule for 



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178 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

the nervous man is to follow the example just 
quoted, and take a close look at the demeanor of 
his dogs, before he proceeds to flush the game. 
By doing this he will not only receive an edify- 
ing hint to restrain his own ardor at the right 
moment, and consequently learn to shoot better, 
but also gain an insight into the hearts of his 
canine friends which will be worth remembering. 
Ponto is not a mere sporting implement, like the 
gun, gentle reader; he participates in all the 
hopes, the fears, the joys of the day, which, how- 
ever, only stimulates him in the pursuit of game, 
and makes him staunch and true to his point. 
He inherits his professional qualities and dis- 
plays them in the field at a very early age. We 
no\V rejoice in a stock of pointers, the puppies 
of which hunt, stand and back before they are 
six months old, requiring, in fact, little training 
except to be taught to keep steady at the report 
of the gun, and we have seen a setter which had 
not attained his majority by several months, to 
astonish a number of veteran sportsmen by the 
admirable manner in which he found and stood 
snipe. Whether the dog returns wholly to dust 
or no, it cannot be denied that he has a soul for 
sport. The question of his immortality has been 
ably discussed in a late number of the Edin- 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 179 

burgh Review ; on this point we have nothing 
to say here, except to remark en passant, that it 
is a far pleasanter thing for us to spend two or 
three weeks of a season, in close companionship 
with a high-bred, intelligent, joyous-hearted ani- 
mal, than to be shut up for the same time with 
an austere, pedantic theologian, even though he 
be a bip^d of the true Pharasaical leaven, with his 
bond of immortality signed and sealed in his 
pocket. But it is high time we had the reader 
up and out. 

In the first place, eight or ten hours of unbro- 
ken rest on the night previous is very desirable 
especially if you are in a section of the country 
where game abound, and are disposed to keep 
up your work. We used to be careless on this 
point in **our salad days;" but now, although 
we do not mind hunting from dawn until dusk, 
we invariably retire betimes. In the words of 
the sporting song, 

" It will not do again to say, 

Tho' hearts be still as light, 
That we have hunted all the day, 

-And revelled all the night." 

The dogs, too, must be carefully attended to. 
Be sure that they get a good meat supper and 
are securely lodged on clean litter, with a bucket 



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180 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

of fresli water at their command. Never take a 
dog into your room to mar your rest by shifting 
his camp from comer to corner, or beating old 
Nick's tattoo, with his tail under the bed. He is a 
thousand times better off in the barn or the 
stable, where, if you take a look at his quarters 
before you retire, you will find him all at home, 
buried up to the nose, perhaps, in rye straw. 
If, however, he is an especial favorite, and you 
have serious doubts as to the honesty of the 
neighborhood — for '* train up a dog, and away he 
goes," is a ludicrous saying which many a sports- 
man has rued — in that case if you bring him into 
your sleeping room to make all sure, give him a 
bed raised a foot or more above the floor, that he 
may lie out of the draught of cold air, to which, 
reckless of exposure as he is in the field, he is as 
susceptible in cubiculo as an invalid. If you are 
not careful in this respect, you will have him 
sailing about the room, sounding every inch of 
harbor, like a coast surveyor, and, perhaps, leap- 
ing on the bed ; or wanting water in the course 
of the night, he will bring down the wash-stand 
and its appurtenances about his ears, with a 
grand crash, — or pull down your shooting 
clothes, and hauling them out of the current of 
air, make a dog-mat out of them until morning. 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 181 

We once knew a valuable pointer belonging to 
a friend, to open the door of the chamber in 
which he was lodged with his master, and wan- 
dering into the entry, pitch over a part of the 
staircase unguarded by bannisters, and lay him- 
self up for the season. Moreover, introducing 
dogs into the sleeping apartments of their mas- 
ters learns them indolent habits. What will the 
reader think of a sportsman's suddenly missing 
his dog at the last moment, with the steamboat 
in sight from the pier — a dozen unpleasant sus- 
picions crowding on his mind — the bar-tender, 
boots and the ostler all actively engaged on the 
scout, and when the rascal turned up at the 
eleventh hour, he was actually discovered by the 
chambermaid, lovingly locked in the arms of 
Somnus in a lodger's bed. Truly, luxury which 
ruined the Roman empire, would soon make 
Sybarites of Ponto and Dash, as it has of their 
cousins, the King Charles and the Blenheim. 
Clean rye straw in a warm stall is good enough 
for the villains, in the frostiest night that ever 
made Dapple cough as she chewed the cud, or 
honest Dobbin kick at the stable door. They 
will come out of it in the morning top side up, 
with shining noses and sinews new strung for a 
a hard day's hunt. 
12 



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182 . KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

The next morning, breakfast being over, and 
all things in readiness for an early start, if you 
have any distance to ride to the grounds which 
you design to shoot over, by all means take in 
the dogs. Apart from the looks of the thing, 
they are liable to be lost on the road in a strange 
neighborhood, and to be worried by country 
curs. It is the practice of a sportsman early to 
accustom his brace of dogs to their places under 
his feet in a wagon, where they will soon learn 
to lie still and mute, without discommoding each 
other or their masters. A dog thus treated 
enjoys a ride to and from the grounds quite as 
much as the shooter, and most assuredly equally 
deserves it. Several instances have come under 
our notice, of valuable dogs which have been 
fagged to death by the carelessness or brutality 
of their owners, in forcing them to run for many 
miles in warm weather after a hard hunt. Such 
heartlessness cannot be too severely condemned, 
and we will venture to say that the persons who 
were guilty of it, never felt a single spark of the 
generous feeling inherent in the breast of a 
sportsman. It should be a standing rule with 
every shooter who takes a dog into the field, that 
when I ride my dogs ride also. We have had 
occasion to notice in our sporting tours, a selfish 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 183 

indifference to the comforts of their dogs in some 
men, otherwise keen sportsmen, and a cockney- 
ish affectation of noli me tangerCj equivalent to 
get out, you inferior brute — in others. The first 
are those, called in the vulgar parlance pot- 
hunters, who, after Ponto has helped to fill the 
bag, and shown no sign of flagging while there 
was light left to shoot over him, unceremoniously 

d li the dog and deny him a passage 

though ten weary miles may intervene. The 
second are the dandy cockneys; "the softly 
sprighted men," who are so terribly afraid of 
fleas that they would on no account sit in the 
same vehicle with a dog, and who ask, in a voice 
like the ring of a cracked glass: "How does 
your fallow greyhound, sir ?" Of course it nevpr 
enters the mind of either of these worthy gentle- 
men, that the dog, whom they neglect and de- 
spise, is the nobler animal of the two, and that 
they have in reality, little to offer against his 
fidelity and devotion, except the form made after 
the Creator's image. The intellect of the one 
master is too obtuse, and that of the other too 
much infused with self-conceit, to dream of such 
a comparison. Nevertheless, they might well 
ask themselves, as a child did of a star : " /^ it 
true V 



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184 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

It behooves the sportsman to make sure that 
no one but the pilot and game-bearer, — who, by 
the way, should never be permitted to take a gun 
with him to the field, under any pretence what- 
ever — insinuates himself into the party. If it 
originally consists of four, it must of course be 
divided, as two men are enough to hunt in com- 
pany over any cultivated country. It was our 
fortune once, while shooting in an adjoining 
state, to be joined by a party of country gentle- 
men, to the number of six or seven, who, heaven 
reward their kindness, though it certainly was 
misplaced — had turned out in sporting trim to 
honor our advent. Besides Czar and Dash, we 
received a reinforcement of two fox-hounds, one 
terrier, one shock-dog, four nondescript curs and 
one poodle — a very respectable pack, each and 
all in good condition, and eager, like their mas- 
ters, to take the field. The pointer snuffed 
around this motley crowd with high-bred scorn, 
and the setter, being younger, did not attempt to 
conceal his chagrin, but bristled his back and 
showed his white teeth at each of his strange 
field mates in turn. However, there was nothing 
else for it, and out we went to the stubbles at 
seven in the morning, the curs, of course, taking 
the lead. A covey of birds were speedily found 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 185 

and scattered, each man doing his best to set on 
his bnite in chase, when the hounds struck a 
trail, and off they went, yelping to the hills, fol- 
lowed by the terrier and the poodle, and, last of 
all by their masters. The curs stuck closer, and 
it speedily appeared that, living upon farms 
adjoining each other, they were no strangers to 
those little jealousies and petty heart-burnings, 
which, to say the truth, are so common among 
country folks of a certain class. 

After considerable preliminary snarling and 
wrangling, by a little judicious management the 
feuds blazed out over the body of an innocent 
opossum, which one of them had dragged out of 
his hole, and to it, might and main, they went, 
all except the shock-dog, who, belying his name, 
stood barking, aloof. A dog fight in the country 
when the combatants happen to be large, strong 
animals, as was the case in this instance, is an 
obstinately contested affair; in attempting to 
separate the belligerents, their masters became 
infected with the same pugnacious spirit ; down 
went guns and into the melee went the country 
gentlemen to our great delight, each flourishing 
a pair of fists a la Hyer ; when, noticing the opos- 
sum stealing quietly off, (his old trick,) we as 
quietly followed his sage example, and making for 



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186 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

the nearest road, jumped into a farmer's wagon, 
whicli bore us and our four-footed friends some 
five miles oif from the scene of the fray, where 
we found birds and had fair sport. 

Having now entered the stubbles, observe the 

different modes in which the dogs proceed to 

traverse the ground. The morning is calm, clear 

and bracing. The young dog at once dashes 

out into the centre of the field, quartering his 

ground as he goes, and feathering in fine style 

with the hoar frost flying in his track, while the 

pointer, as usual, directs his course towards the 

comers, near which experience has taught him 

the birds are often found. He is not mistaken, 

for see close to that bunch of broom-corn, near 

the south angle of the fence, he stands "fast 

fixed," while the setter, beaten again in the first 

point in despite of his dash, backs steadily from 

the spot on which he had already detected some 

faint effluvia of the feeding game. The shooters 

come up at quick step, yet cautiously, each in 

the attitude of a practised sportsman ; the covey 

is flushed, each deliberately singles out and 

knocks down his birds; the dogs are sent to 

retrieve either by the command, "seek, dead 

bird,'' or by a simple wave of the hand; the 

game is retrieved ; the guns re-loaded, and the 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 187 

parties proceed to follow the remainder of the 
covey, which have flown in the direction of 
the adjacent woods. Just upon its edge the 
axe has been recently at work, and several 
trees, still covered with their faded foliage, lie 
a little to the right of the fence in a line 
with the flight of the birds. In this cover the 
covey has doubtless hidden, and with good 
management a half dozen shots may be obtained 
on the spot. " Heed ! heed ! brave dogs !" See, 
Dash has come upon a bird which has pitched 
short of the cover under the fence, and he stops 
short and gives the never-failing sign, while old 
Czar, the winner of first blood, backs staunch as 
stone. Now if your eyes be good, you may see 
that bird lying close to the rail-post, its body 
drawn up into the smallest compass and per- 
fectly motionless. Its white chin has betrayed 
it, and you can now distinguish its bright eyes 
fixed timidly upon you. It has probably struck 
the ground and ran a yard or two to its hiding 
place, or the dogs might have passed it by, so 
tightly is the plumage compressed, and the 
wings shut down over the odoriferous glands, 
by muscular actions induced by the influence 
of fear. Observe how close the setter is to the 
bird ; now just as a man holds his breath when 



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189 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

his pursuers are near, the partridge tightens its 
skin so as to occupy the smallest possible space, 
and in so doing, if it lies exactly on the spot on 
which its feet first struck, it will probably puz- 
zle the dogs, who can detect no effluvia in the 
air or upon the earth for obvious reasons. You 
may easily imagine how different is the case 
when the birds have left a trail, or are feeding 
in a body, with the scent steaming freely from 
their feathers. The whole mystery lies in a 
nutshell ; — up whirs the bird from under your 
feet — missed clean, by Jove ! — but the second 
barrel riddles him, and he lies still short of the 
fallen timber and close to the fence. An old 
cock that, for a wager ; — but charge your piece, 
and let us at them, for an old snipe shooter, 
above all things, detests burning daylight. 
Mark how cautiously the dogs approach the 
cover ; now Dash is pointing the dead bird : 
''fetch! so! good dog!" — you that way and I 
this. 

Both dogs point simultaneously on either side 
of the trees; now, keep cool, and remember, 
that, as you are shooting a sixteen guage gun 
which throws her charge very compactly for 
some distance, you must give your birds a fair 
start and then kill them clean. 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 189 

"Whir! whir!'' 

"Bang! bang!" 

Both birds down ; both dogs steady as statues ! 
Now charge the empty barrel, and if a bird 
should rise before you have capped, let it go. 
You remember the pair of barrels which we 
saw at Krider's last spring, the left hand one 
rent at the middle, just where the head of the 
rod reached, when the hasty gentleman fired at 
the snipe. 

"Ready?" 

" All ready." 

" Now kick the boughs on your side." 

"Whir! wbir! whir! whir!" 

"Bang! bang! bang! bang!" 

There goes another — and another, shooting 
through the trees ; they are the last, for see the 
dogs are off their points ; those birds were killed 
in a style which reflects credit on the art ; six 
down ; we will charge, retrieve the dead birds, 
and push on to a second stubble-field. 

You observe how long Dash was in finding 
this bird, although I knew the very spot where 
it fell : he passed and re-passed within a few 
feet of it several times before he discovered it ; 
death having suddenly suspended all the vital 
phenomena, the dog was in a similar position to 



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190 KRIDEE'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

the dead game, as if he was hunting for a live 
bird, which, in the act of hiding away, had par- 
tially or wholly withheld its scent. Now let us 
away to the next field, for one half of the life of 
sporting is in its motion. A hard hunter is most 
invariably a fair shot ; but a fair shot is not 
always a hard hunter. 

Hie on, good dogs. — But, mark yonder fea- 
thered pirate perched near the top of the tall 
tree, on the edge of the wheat stubble. He is 
out after game, too, for see, he has a bird in his 
talons, and feeling perfectly secure, he is pluck- 
ing it where he sits. Is there no way of pun- 
ishing that fellow, and of putting, a final period 
to his depredations? Yes, by Jove, there is. 
Here comes the farmer down the lane to water 
his horses. 

" Good morning, Adam. Do you see yonder 
hen-harrier?" 

" Ay, I sees the thief" 

" Will your horses stand fire ?" 

" Ay, here's old bay Charles — he's twenty-six 
next grass — be danged if he doesn't stand a dis- 
ruption of 'Suvius." 

" Well then, we'll put an end to that fellow's 
forays on your poultry-yard. Jump on Charles, 
while I take down the bars ; now guide him so 



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PAKTRIDGE SHOOTING. 191 

as to pass within a few rods of the tree. I will 
walk on your off side — the hawk will not move ; 
he sees only one thing at a time, and he knows 
there is no harm in the old horse. My friend 
will keep the dogs with him here at the fence, 
and if you can manage to strike up a careless 
whistle, Adam, so much the better." 

^*Nay, nay," said the old man in a cracked 
voice- " I'se done whistling this many a day 
since my old dame died ; but, an' you like, I'll 
sing." 

"No, no, my good friend," I whispered as we 
approached the tree, "that would spoil all." 
The hawk still continued to feed, although I 
was satisfied that he saw the horse plainly 
enough ; once or twice he looked down upon us 
as if in some distrust ; but the farmer turned 
the horse's head a little off from the tree, and 
the bird quietly resumed its meal. We were 
now close to the trunk; Adam checked the 
horse, and raising the gun, which I had previ- 
ously kept out of sight as much as possible, I 
took a quick aim and fired. The hawk dropped 
but hung to its perch with one foot, while the 
other still retained its prey. 

" Hurrah !" exclaimed the old man, "give him 
the other barrel," and down the plunderer came 



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192 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

at the report, tumbling from bough to bough to 
our feet, where he lay on liis back displaying 
his spotted belly, barred tail, and sharp talons, 
with the remains of a hen partridge in his grip. 
Adam jumped off his horse and examined him 
with curious attention. 

"Be danged. Mister," said he, pointing to the 
bird's neck which was partially bare, " but his 
head has been in one of my steel traps ; the 
teeth caught in the bait and saved him that 
time ; my boys found the trap sprung and the 
feathers lying near, and right glad they'll be 
to see the thief nailed to the side of the barn." 

"Ay," said I, "we dare say, but Mr. T. and 
I must be off;" and bidding the old man good 
morning, we started for a neighboring copse, in 
which we suspected the covey had flown, after 
having been surprised and scattered by the 
hawk. However, we hunted it through and 
through without, obtaining a single point, and 
after trying an old stubble thickly overgrown 
with Indian grass, were about to push on in 
search of another covey, when, as we approached 
a hollow in which heaps of brush had accumu- 
lated, the old dog drew suddenly up with Dash 
close in his rear, and, " here they are," said T., 
measuring the distance from the tree on which 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 193 

the hawk was shot, with his eye. There they 
were, sure enough, having crept to the very 
bottom of the brush-pile through the d^ad twigs 
and branches. We had nine successive shots 
before the dogs stirred, when T. called them off, 
declaring that he would not shoot at another 
bird. In fact, you could hear them squeak and 
scratch their way out at every kick which we 
gave the pile — when, in the nick of time, down 
came a surly countryman, with a hound-cur and 
a friend at his heels, and ordered us off. The 
man was at first decidedly wolfish, and half in- 
clined to create a row, but the suavity of T. and 
the inimitable manner in which he weathered 
upon him as soon as he found out his name, 
claiming relationship — by Adam's side, I sup- 
pose — and introducing his liquor-flask into the 
discussion in his fine, off-hand way, put the man 
in decent humor at last. The other fellow, how- 
ever, fought shy. He was a shrewd, lantern- 
jawed, cat-eyed, close-fisted clodhopper; setting 
his cunning avaricious orbs on T.'s face, for a 
time he listened with an occasional smirk, to his 
rigmarole, whittling a stick the while, and turn- 
ing up his nose at the dogs. I was inclined to 
let him alone, thinking that he was too much for 
me, when, after moistening his throat with such 



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194 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

whiskey as he had never tasted before in 
a dream, he opened his -oracular jaws and 
spake : . 

" Do you ever shoot gray snipe ?" said he. 

" Why, yes, sometimes in the spring of the 
year when there is nothing else to hunt, you 
know," answered T., while I silently pricked up 
my ears. 

"Waal,'' said the other, "I didn't know; 
there's heaps on 'em on my place." 

" Indeed," answered T., " try another dash of 
that whiskey — ^snipe are strange birds ; here to- 
day and off to-morrow. Your land lies well, 
Mr. Sluicedam." 

" I s'pose, squire," said Mr. Sluicedam's cute 
friend, screwing up his eyes and recovering his 
breath after a long drink, " when you goes out 
arter partridges, you goes out arter partridges, 
and when you goes out arter snipe, you goes out 
arter snipe — eigh?" 

" Something in that way, I confess," answered 
T. "The fact is, you see, Mr Sluicedam, I 
don't overlike the water myself, and my friend 
there had as soon take a kick from a weaned colt 
as get his feet wet. We don't get out often, but 
when you and your friend happen to be in the 
city, I hope you will give us a call ;" and taking 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 195 

his boot maker's card from his pocket he presented 
it with his usual grace. We then prepared to 
move on, when, in spite of a peculiar glunce from 
T.'s eye, I determined to put the question : 

" Is that your land which adjoins Mr. Sluice- 
dam's?" said I carelessly. 

"Why, no," said he, with a grin, "it ain't, 
by a long shot. It wouldn't be no manner of 
use to tell you where my place be, you know, 
since you both hate water so. Good mornin' 
gentlemen." 

" Hang the fellow !" I exclaimed. 

" JV'tmporife," said T., "I have his outlines; 
here, hold my gun for a moment, I'll fill them 
up while the impression is fresh." Taking pen- 
cil and paper from his pocket, he set down on a 
stump, and with a few bold strokes and scientific 
dashes, executed so felicitous a caricature of 
the countryman, that I could not but smile at 
the likeness. " Now," said he, "we will show 
this to our jolly host; he will recognize it at 
once, and if we are not among our friend's gray 
snipe to-morrow betimes, we will give him 
liberty to call us gray geese." 

" But the first shot will bring the fellow out 
upon us," said I. 

" No," said he, laughing, "for cousin Sluice- 



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196 KRroER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

dam let it ooze out, that his friend and his family 
were on a visit to his place, to stay over Sun- 
day." 

"Then," said I, "he's had, confound him, 
and I shall knock down his snipe with all the 
greater satisfaction." 

"He must live well inland," remarked T., 
carefully putting up the portrait, " I never saw 
him before ; and I'll wager now the birds lie in 
some tussocky meadow, or reedy marsh, along 
the bank of a creek." 

"Or in a wet stubble-field,, most likely," 
said I. 

"True," said he. "But send out the dogs, 
let us kill partridges to-day and snipe to-morrow; 
though how any sportsmen can compare the two 
kinds of shooting, rather puzzles me to imagine." 

In a few moments the dogs pointed in a buck- 
wheat field, on the edge of a corn stubble, and 
after obtaining a double shot apiece, we fol- 
lowed them into an orchard, where T. shot a 
cock bird out of the low crotch of an apple tree. 
They then pitched into a hedge along the steep 
bank of a run, with a low, swampy meadow on 
the further side. Here we killed them singly at 
leisure, until we had pretty well thinned the 
covey. 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 197 

It was now near noon, and after pausing to 
refresh ourselves at a spring, we debated the 
propriety of fleeting away an hour or two in a 
sunny hollow out of the wind, and although the 
vote was unanimous to keep quiet until the birds 
had returned to the stubbles, yet such is the 
restless desire to keep moving, which a man im- 
bibes in the marshes, that the decision was soon 
reversed with equal unanimity, and resuming 
our guns, we pushed on. 

W.e will now take occasion to observe to the 
general reader, that at this hour of the day the 
birds are most difficult to find, each covey hav- 
ing retired to some out of the way part of the 
farm which it inhabits, where it lies in a com- 
paratively small compass, basking, pruning and 
dusting, precisely like chickens in the barnyard 
or garden on a sunny day, after their crops are 
filled. 

The flight of the partridge from the stubbles, 
or the drinking-place, is generally direct to the 
pruning place, so that the dogs can find no clue 
to the spot, though, occasionally, a sagacious 
animal, falling back upon his experience, will 
lead directly to the haunt. This is either on 
the edge of a copse of young trees, in which the 
sun's ray penetrates — under the lee of a gravelly 
13 



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198 KRIDKR'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

hill — in a sheltered hollow fringed with a few 
scattered bushes, or under a large bush in a 
boggy meadow, and we have even found them 
in a rough, stony country, huddled in the hol- 
low of a large stump. In stormy weather they 
retire into the woods, in which situations we 
have flushed them from under a thick cedar 
bush. On the day in question, the first point 
after we left the spring, occurred in a line of 
thick grass close to a rail fence. The birds 
flew from thence into an open woods, and the 
covey being a very full one, we had considerable 
sport in picking up the scattered birds. In hunt- 
ing up these, T. bagged a woodcock and a ruffed 
grouse, the first over a point by the setter, while 
the last sprang at the report of his gun dis- 
charged at a partridge, and was wing-tipped, at 
a long shot, with the second barrel. 

A circumstance attended the retrieving of this 
bird, which went far to show some traits in the 
disposition of the pointer dog, Czar. It was shot 
from the edge of a ravine in the woods, and fell 
among the thick brush at the bottom. I was 
then in full sight of my companion, with Czar 
hunting on the brink of the broken ground in ad- 
vance. Contrary to the dog's custom and regu- 
lar rule of training, at the report of T.'s gun, he 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 199 

started down the side of the ravine at a run, but 
turned and came in at the sound of the whistle, 
dropping his stern rather sulkily as I thought. 
The setter was sent into the ravine, but after a 
long hunt was unable to find the bird. I then 
directed the pointer " to seek dead bird," but he 
refused to go out, and showed his teeth when 
corrected, for which he received a sound thrash- 
ing. We then sent both dogs out again, and 
descended into the ravine, the sides and bottom 
of which were covered with brush. After search- 
ing for the grouse for some moments, we gave it 
up and climbed the opposite side. When we 
had advanced about a hundred yards deeper 
in the woods. Czar suddenly turned back at full 
gallop and in a few minutes came to my side 
with the bird fluttering jn his mouth. He had, 
no doubt, observed it fall in the first place, as he 
had probably seen hundreds fall before, but why 
he should show any desire to retrieve it before 
he was ordered, unless he had noticed that it 
was merely winged, was the puzzle. His sulki- 
ness and impatience of correction, both of which 
were unusual, inclined me strongly to think that 
this was actually the case ; and when the bird 
was found in the manner related, my friend and 
I were confirmed in our belief. As T. remarked 



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200 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

at the time, it was one of those chance looks into 
a dog's heart which a man is not favored with 
every season. 

We found four coveys before sundown, and 
came in at night pretty well fagged, with twenty- 
five brace and an odd bird, exclusive of the cock 
and the grouse. On this day's excursion, on t^e 
tenth of November, we did not meet with a 
single covey of birds which were not fully 
fledged. 

The first thing now to be attended to, after 
swallowing a glass of hot rum-punch and a 
cracker, is to examine the dog's feet, wash them 
with whiskey ; then see the animals well fed 
and housed, with an abundance of water at their 
command. The game is then to be strung and 
hung out in a secure place, and the barrels of 
the guns washed out. This being done you 
may then retire to your room, wash and change; 
and, curious as it may seem to the uninitiated, 
descend to the dining-room, a veritable novus 
homo, a genuine new man, with an excellent 
appetite for the substantial repast, which the 
host is careful to prepare for the sportsman. If 
ever a man enters into the heart of his dinner, so 
to speak, it is after a day's hunt, when the juicy 
tenderness of a beef-steak melts through and 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 201 

through him, and the flavor of a wild duck, — if 
he is lucky enough to have it on the board, — 
leaves a sort of twang on the palate, which the 
prince of gourmands might envy. We have a 
friend who never tastes shad but once during 
the season, and that is on his first snipe shooting 
excursion in the spring. The remembrance of 
that shad, taken out of the river in front of the 
house where he generally puts up, lasts him 
during the year, and he is always anxious to be 
oflF on the succeeding spring, that he may taste 
another. 

After dinner you may have a glass of punch, 
a chat, or a rubber of whist, if the party be large 
enough, and then to bed. Before retiring, T. 
showed his portrait of the countryman to our 
host, who, after he had heard the circumstances 
of the meeting, recognized it at once, and laugh- 
ing heartily, readily put us on the track of the 
snipe preserve, assuring us that the fellow was 
one of the veriest churls and most renowned skin- 
flints in the state. 

" I can't tell exactly where snipe harbor on 
his lands," said he, " for he lives several miles 
inland from the shore, but it is off the road about 
a half a mile back from the brick mill. Of 
course, your dogs can't miss finding them, if 



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202 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

they are there, and I hope you won't leave a 
bird on the place. You must look out for his 
dog if you go near the house, for they say he is 
as savage as a Turk, and as ready to fight as 
Paul Jones." 

The next morning we were on the road by 
sunrise, and after an hour's drive came to the 
mill, where we had the horse put up, and started 
over the fields at once. After some travelling 
over very unpromising ground, we suddenly 
came upon a sunken corn-field of black loam, 
with the stalks left standing and a gleam of water 
in the furrows. 

" Whist !" exclaimed T., pointing to the house 
which was within two hundred yards, **here is 
the ground, let us lose no time." 

Accordingly, we crossed the fence and entered 
at different points,, each dog drawing steadily on 
in advance, with the scent blowing full in his 
nostrils. In this way they worked up to the 
game, when — " Scheep ! scheep !" up flittered 
the little gray imps, ten or twelve on a fly, and 
down again, scarce twenty yards off*, apparently 
regardless of the reports, and showing little dis- 
position to leave the ground. Observing this, I 
reduced my charges, and soon found that T. 
had done the same. And now was seen, to the 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 203 

very best advantage, the admirable qualities of a 
crack snipe dog. If both animals had not been 
under perfect command, and gun-wise in every 
respect, the birds would have soon collected in a 
body, and left the place for a long flight, as we 
knew of no snipe ground, except this twenty- 
acre field, for miles around. But by keeping a 
few paces in front, dropping at every shot, and 
advancing as slowly as a dead march, when they 
heard the click of the gun-locks, while their mas- 
ters were careful to keep perfectly silent, the 
snipe were little alarmed, and we had half of 
them down before they rose higher in the wind 
than our heads, seeming, as they darted up with 
their usual weird cry, and alit a few rods off, to 
be too busily engaged in feeding to regard us 
in any other light, than peevish interlopers, who 
would persist in coming between them and their 
gnome-like operations on the moist earth. It is 
well known to sportsmen, especially ' to snipe 
shooters, that the voice of a man, or the miscon- 
duct of a half-broken dog, will do more to scare 
game away from a feeding ground, than the 
sound of the guns, and that if the shooters move 
silently and slowly on, regulating their charges 
in proportion to the extent of the cover, and the 
proximity with which the birds spring, it is 



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204 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

next to impossible to drive snipe, fonnd in par- 
ticular situations, from their feed, before tbeir 
numbers are pretty well thinned. In the happy 
observance of these rules by the shooter and his 
dogs, consists, in our opinion, the perfection of 
the art, that the one should know how to follow 
up his game, and the other to be either as slow as 
a tortoise or as fleet as the wind, just as the occa- 
sion may demand. In more than one instance 
has the sportsman arrived on the ground, and 
found it dried up, especially in a vast range of 
flat meadow land ; when by sending out a fleet 
dog he has, perhaps, seen him on a stand, or 
marked water fly from his feet at a great dis- 
tance; and upon coming up, lo! here is a wet 
spot, with a cover of dead reeds, perhaps the only 
one to be found for miles around — and here he 
has often killed from thirty to forty birds. And 
how often, on the other hand, has the sportsman, 
who from cnlpable carelessnes, or a mistaken 
spirit of economy, is content to go out with a 
heedless, half-broken dog, had his temper tried 
and his day's shooting spoilt, by seeing the birds 
driven off" before he has obtained a half a dozen 
shots. 

A pottering pointer or a setter that habitually 
rakes, or carries his nose low, no matter how 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 205 

staunch he may be, is infinitely inferior to a 
free, up-headed, thorough-broken, fast-going dog 
of either stock, and such a dog at any time should 
command a price, of from eighty-five to a hundred 
dollars. But when gentlemen object, as is often 
the case, to paying the price, after having made 
a fair trial of the animal, it is not strange that 
for' one really good dog in our large cities, you 
will find fifty that will break shot — run in upon 
a point — prove gun-foolish in the field, and in 
fact show nothing of the true sporting dog, ex- 
cept his instinctive qualities of finding and point- 
ing game. There are men of good knowledge in 
sporting affairs, who have attempted to break 
dogs in a proper way ; but the little encourage- 
ment given to them by the public has thrown 
the business almost entirely into the hands of 
market-shooters, who, of all classes of men, prove 
the very worst masters, into whose hands a pro- 
mising young dog can possibly fall. However, 
as sporting is largely on the increase among us, 
no doubt, in the course of time, the evil will 
remedy itself. In the meantime, never purchase 
a dog without trying him yourself, especially if 
he is offered at a reduced price. 

We had gradually driven the remainder of 
the birds into a part of the field nearest to the 



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206 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

house, when, as I fired at a snipe which rose in 
front of me, I observed the farmer's dog coming 
down the slope at full speed, and had barely time 
to whistle in Czar, before the enraged brute 
dashed into a run between us, struggled through 
its oozy sides and came at me open mouthed. I 
presented the muzzle of the gun, which he 
eagerly seized, trying his teeth upon it several 
times, though I forbore to fire the remaining 
barrel, savage as he seemed, with his fierce eyes, 
cropt ears, broad, bull-terrier head, and jaws like 
those of a wolf trap. I was more afraid of his 
getting hold Czar, who had, himself, a small 
spice of Satan in his composition, when suddenly 
he wheeled about, keeping all the time perfectly 
mute, save a hyena snarl, and re-crossing the ran, 
waded through the mud and leisurely ascended 
the hill. Re-loading the empty barrel, I ad- 
vanced still nearer the house and fired again, 
when down came old Blucher a second time, 
passed the stream with the same fierce pertina- 
city, and again tries his teeth on my stub and 
twist. This time I could not forbear laughing 
in his face, which made him more furious than 
ever, though he made no attempt to get at me 
or the dog, but contented himself with wreaking 
his wrath on the gun-barrel, against which he 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 207 

appeared to have some especial pique. In a 
minute or two he retreated as before, again tak- 
ing hiis station on the summit of the hill, and ap- 
parently keeping a sharp look-out. At the very 
next shot, down he came the third time, when, 
instead of forming a square to receive him, I 
broke into an uncontrolable fit of laughter, which 
so enraged T., who had come up in the mean- 
time, that he levelled his piece at his head, and 
would have put a stop to his peregrinations for- 
ever, but for my earnest entreaties to do him no 
harm. He soon returned to his post of observa- 
tion, and we afterwards learned from a near 
neighbor of the farmer's, that the mere report of 
a gun was sufficient to arouse his fiercest ire, 
which circumstance was attributed to his having 
accidentally been shot a year or two before. On 
the succeeding fall a party from the city got 
into trouble about the same dog, one of them 
having shot him dead, while charging him like 
a perfect fury in a stubble-field. 

Having killed thirty odd brace of snipe in the 
corn-field, and along the run, we were returning 
to the mill by the lane, when we encountered 
Mr. Sluicedam's friend and his family returning 
home from their visit, and a pretty rage the man 
flew into when he spied the birds in the netting, 



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208 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

for we carried game-bags in those days. He 
checked his horse at once, and exasperated by a 
look of triumph which I conld not forbear, 
jumped from his wagon and confronted us. 

" Who gave you liberty to shoot over these 
grounds?" he began, while the miller who was 
with him, also alighted, and the old lady and the 
little ones thrust their curious faces out of the 
vehicle, in expectation of a grand row. 

"Why," says T., in his blandest way, "did^ 
not you, yourself, tell us that the birds were 
here?" 

" Yes, I did," he replied, working himself up 
as if he found it difficult to stand our friend's 
manner and something in' his eye, "but I did 
not tell you to come after them — dang it !" 

" My good fellow," returned T., with greater 
suavity than before, " when next you have 
game on your place, if you wish to preserve them, 
let me caution you against showing even so 
much as their tail-coverts to an old snipe 
shooter. Good morning !" 

So saying he moved on and I followed, touch- 
ing my hat' to the dame, and leaving the two 
countrymen standing stock still in the lane, as 
mute as mile-stones. The next day we returned 
to the city and have heard nothing of Mr. Sluice- 
dam and his friend since. 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 209 

Nothing satisfactory is yet known respecting the 
cause which impels the partridge to shift its lo- 
cality, for a few weeks, during what is commonly 
called the running season. These movements oc- 
cur in October and the first week in November, 
generally in companies considerably exceeding 
the usual number of the respective coveys, and 
are observed to be directed from the north- 
west towards the sea-board, and the low grounds 
along the large water-courses. Possibly, they 
may be governed by an instinctive desire for 
some unknown species of food, only to be found, 
in these latter districts. The little travellers, 
like the devotees of old, literally perform their 
annual pilgrimage barefoot, merely making use 
of their wings to cross such streams as occur in 
their route, and running with such amazing 
swiftness, when encountered by man, as to 
make it difiicult to overtake and flush them, 
even with a fleet dog. We have frequently met 
them crossing the roads in great numbers, and 
at other times observed them running through 
the streets of towns and villages, and even upon 
the house-tops, before sun-rise. The same 
periodical movements have been noticed in the 
ruffed grouse and the wild turkey, and a few 
years since a small flock of the latter made their 



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210 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

appearance on the Susquehanna, as low down 
as Port Deposit. The pilgrimage is said to ter- 
minate in the return of the birds to their native 
haunts, and their re-division into coveys of from 
eight or ten to fifteen or twenty. 

In regard to the companies of confirmed old 
bachelors, asserted by Forrester to have been 
found in the family of the American partridge, 
it is our misfortune, claiming as we do, to be- 
long to the distinguished fraternity, never to 
have encountered these feathered odd-fellows. 
In the crowded English preserves, according to 
the statement of various old writers, such socie- 
ties do actually exist, and these old cocks do 
incontinently wage war upon the young ones, ♦ 
partly for the sake of enjoying their privacy, 
undisturbed by ridiculous affairs of gallantry, 
which they have long ago found to be mere 
.vanity and vexation of soul, and partly from a 
delectable spirit of moroseness which, thank 
heaven, every bachelor beneath the stars, has 
an undisputed right to affect, whenever he 
sees fit. We are, certainly, much indebted 
to Mr. Herbert's penetration in discovering 
these little isolated communities of Benedicts, 
which still endure in the midst of gynarchies, 
and whose habits tally so remarkably with 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 211 

those of the English partridge, as described by 
Mr. Daniel and other veteran sportsmen. Some 
cavillers might hint that Forrester had taken 
the British accounts and applied them in a slap- 
dash way to the American bird ; for our own 
part, whenever we may chance to meet the 
odd-fellows parading in the badges of their 
order, during the season when the rest of the 
species are divided into pairs, and attending 
to family duties, we shall not fail to extend the 
>right hand of fellowship towards them, in the 
shape of one of Krider's stub and twist. Until 
that time, not wishing to be too hasty in con- 
elusions, we reserve our opinion. We do not, 
however, believe that the disproportion between 
the males and females is so great as is repre- 
sented by some writers ; that a plurality of 
males does exist in the broods is not denied ; 
but we think that even the English accounts 
are exaggerated in this respect, especially as an 
error has seemed to have been at one time 
prevalent in that country, in reference to the 
markings of the male and female bird. 

In its character the American partridge is 
lively and courageous, very impatient of con- 
finement, and attached in a remarkable degree 
to the locality in which it is bred. Whether 



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212 KRIDEK'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

from old associations or something in their ap- 
pearance and habits, there is a feeling akin to 
sweet and innocent fellowship involved in the 
presence of these birds on a country homestead. 
The simplicity of their wonted, mellow call, 
falls soothingly upon the ear in the pleasant 
summer time, and 

" When icicles hang by the "wall," 

and the field is wTapped in its mantle of white, 
one might almost imagine a religious sentiment 
connected with their appearance in the barn- 
yard, or the print of their tiny feet in the snow, 
as if they were the fowls of the air mentioned 
in Holy Writ, and as such must be fed for a 
little season. In conclusion, we could heartily 
wish that the few coveys which have survived 
the severity of the winters of fifty-one and two, 
might be allowed to recrui,t their diminished 
numbers in peace, for several successive seasons. 
We shall conclude this article with a brief 
sketch of Hark, a celebrated setter dog, the pro- 
perty of L. de la Cuesta, Esq., of this city. 
This dog is of imported stock, and bears so close 
a resemblance to an engraving of Beau in the 
third volume of Mr. Daniel's Rural Sports of 
England, that the likeness of one dog, taken 
more than a half a century since, might tri- 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 213 

umphantly pass at the present day for that of 
the other. 

Hark was bred by a Mr. Robinson of Wil- 
mington, Delaware, and came into his present 
owner's possession at the age of ten months. 
At that time he was a rough, rugged-looking 
puppy, and first attracted notice by the steadi- 
ness and sagacity which he displayed on the 
snipe grounds. After purchasing him from Mr. 
Robinson, Mr. Cuesta was induced to bestow 
unusual attention to his training, and he sub- 
sequently became a very superior' animal. Like 
his counterpart of old, — from whom he may, 
possibly, be descended, — he was equally excel- 
lent on all varieties of game, and as a snipe dog 
was, perhaps, never excelled. He is of a large 
size, very roughly coated, of a white color, the 
ears dashed with datk red spots. In his best 
days he was hunted with Poke, a liver-colored 
pointer belonging to the same gentleman, and 
also a capital field dog. As a proof of the 
staunchness of Hark, he has been repeatedly 
left pointing partridges, while the sportsman 
crossed the fence to shoot over Poke, who had 
found a second covey in an adjoining field. 
The first dog was always discovered at his post 
on the shooter's return. It was only necessary 
14 



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214 KRIDEB'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

for his master to speak to him in the first in- 
stance, to ensure this, after an absence of nearly 
an hour, and if found lying on the ground, he 
would rise and resume his true professional 
attitude as the parties approached. He was a 
capital retrierer and an expert swimmer. It 
was, probably, owing to his docility in lying 
close when so ordered, that the lives of the 
editor and a friend Avere not endangered, when 
crossing the Delaware in a skiff during a 
south-easterly blow. Had he destroyed the 
equilibrium of the boat, by shifting his posi- 
tion as the water dashed over him, she must 
have inevitably filled in the middle of the 
river. 

In hunting ruffed grouse he displayed great 
skill and sagacity, watching and taking the 
direction in which the pack flew, though he 
never acquired that curious propensity which 
we have seen manifested by some field dogs, to 
give tongue the instant that the birds are sprung, 
and marking the tree on which they often alight 
at this challenge, continue the clamors at its 
foot, until half the pack is shot down. In this 
case the infatuation of the grouse, and its inat- 
tention to the approach of the shooter and even 
to the reports of his gun, are more strikingly dis- 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 215 

played than ia any of the instances previously 
adduced-* It is necessary, however, to have 
very sharp eyes, or you will fail to discover the 
birds, and to shoot the lower ones firsts as the 
rustle attending their fall through the branches 
of the tree, breaks the force of the spell, and 
enables the rest to escape. We have never seen 
this mode of shooting grouse succeed, except in 
the month of September when the birds are 
young, though we have repeatedly been assured 
by farmers, that they have killed old birds 
under precisely similar circumstances. 

Ruffed grouse shooting is generally laborious 
and unsatisfactory work, though, as a variety, 
we have sometimes enjoyed a half a day's sport 
in the rugged hills of Bucks and Montgomery, 



* Thej sit upon the large limbs near the trunk of the tree, turn- 
ing their heads from side to side, precisely as the chicken has been 
observed to do under similar circumstances, and gazing down in 
amazement at the dog, which animal would appear to exert as 
powerful an influence over the birds through the medium of his 
voice, as he does over water-fowl by his antics on the shore. Had 
these mysterious powers of fascination been observed in the cat, 
they would have went far to establish her supposed connection 
with vritches and warlocks, the first suspicions of which, no doubt, 
rose out of her still and wierd-like gravity of demeanor. Tray's 
spirit, however, shines too clearly through his clay for him ever to 
be accused of leaning to the black art. 



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216 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

where a few broods still linger. Within our 
recollection, however, they have entirely disap- 
peared from sections of the country, where they 
were once often met with. They afford more 
sport in September, when the young birds are 
fully grown, and in this month we have occa- 
sionally found them in fresh buckwheat stub- 
bles, and in plantations of young trees, in close 
proximity to the woody and precipitous bank of 
a stream. On the farm of an eccentric old 
bachelor, dubbed by his neighbors in the upper 
l>art of Montgomery, King John, these birds 
once bred in undisturbed security. The old 
fellow was peculiar in his habits, and had not 
slept from under the roof of his homestead, for 
.fifty years. He suffered a large part of his farm 
to lie untitled, and never allowed a gun to be 
fired on his premises, except the venerable fowl- 
ing piece, which, in imitation of ancient usages, 
he regularly discharged from his kitchen door 
at sundown, to let the wicked world within 
hearing know, that, as usual, he was at home. 
His house stood upon a hill, one side of which 
was precipitous, and covered with cedars, oaks 
and laurels ; on this side, a steep and broken 
path, known as the Devil's staircase, led down 
to a mill-dam, on which we have occasionally 



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PARTRIDGE SHOOTING. 217 

shot black duck and teal, in spite of King 
John's taboo. As to the grouse which in- 
habited the woody side of the creek, gentle 
reader, they went, where and how you must 
invoke the shades of Toby and Carlo to de- 
termine. 



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WILD FOWL. 

DUCK SHOOTING. 

Proudly pre-eminent among the water-fowl of 
the United States, for the elegance of its 
plumage, the exquisite flavor of its flesh, and 
the sport which it affords the shooter, stands 
the far-famed canvass-back. Gentle reader, if 
you have ever lain submerged in a battery on 
Devil's Island, or in ambuscade in the narrows 
of Spesutia, and watched them pitching, in their 
superb way, among your decoys, or bent to your 
oars on a blustering day, and snatched them 
from the rough waters of the Chesapeake ; or 
studied the markings of their winter dress, as 
they lay upon the thwart-board of the scow in 
pairs of fifty at a*time, and finally, if you have 
sailed, poled or swept back to Havre de Grace 
by the light of the moon — dropped anchor and 
gone on shore to dine upon thefn cooked au 
naturel, — then, perhaps, you have realized, to 
its fullest extent, the spell contained in those 
potent words, — 



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DUCK SHOOTING. 219 

ANAS VALISINERIA. 

THE CANVASS-BACK. 

Description. — " The canvass-back duck is two 
feet long and three in extent, and when in good 
order, weighs three pounds ; the bill is large, 
rising high in the head, three inches in length, 
and one inch and three-eighths thick at the base, 
of a glossy black; eye, very small; irides, dark 
red ; cheeks and fore part of the head, blackish 
brown ; rest of the head and greater part of the 
neck, bright glossy reddish chestnut, ending in 
a broad space of black that covers the upper 
part of the breast, and spreads round to the 
back ; back, scapulars and tertials, white, faintly 
marked with an infinite number of transverse, 
waving lines or points, as if done with a pencil ; 
vrhole lower parts of the breast, also the belly, 
white, slightly pencilled in the same manner, 
scarcely perceptible on the breast, pretty thick 
towards the vent; wing-coverts, gray, with 
numerous specks of blackish; primaries and 
secondaries, pale slate, two or three of the latter 
of which nearest the body are finely edged with 
deep, velvety black, the former dusky at the 
tips; tail, very short, pointed, consisting of 



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220 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

fourteen feathers of a hoary brown ; vent and 
tail-coverts black, lining of the wing, white ; 
legs and feet, very pale ash, the latter three 
inches in width — a circumstance which partly 
accounts for its great powers of swimming. 
The female is somewhat less than the male, and 
weighs two pounds and three-quarters; the 
crown is blackish brown ; cheeks and throat of 
a pale drab; neck, dull brown; breast, as far as 
the black extends on the male, dull brown, 
skirted in many places with pale drab; back, 
dusky white, crossed with fine, waving lines ; 
belly, of the same dull white, pencilled like the 
back ; wings, feet and bill as in the male ; tail- 
covert, dusky ; vent, white, waved with brown. 
The windpipe of the male has a large, flattish, 
concave labyrinth, the ridge of which is covered 
with a thin, transparent membrane ; where the 
trachea enters this, it is very narrow, but im- 
mediately above swells to three times that 
diameter. The intestines are wide, and mea- 
sure five feet in length." 

Ranking next to the canvass-back, in the 
estimation of the sportsman and the epicure, is 



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DUCK SHOOTING. 221 

THE RED-HEADED DUCK. 

ANAS FERINA. 

Description. — " The red-head is twenty inches 
in length, and two feet six inches in extent; bill, 
dark slate, sometimes black, two inches long, 
and seven-eighths of an inch thick at the base, 
furnished with a large, broad nail at the ex- 
tremity; irides, flame colored; plumage of the 
head, long, velvety, and inflated, running high 
above the base of the bill ; head and two inches 
of the neck, deep glossy reddish chestnut ; rest 
of the neck and upper part of the breast, black, 
spreading round to the back ; belly, white, be- 
coming dusky towards the vent by closely 
marked, undulating lines of black; back and 
scapulars, bluish white, rendered gray by 
numerous transverse, waving lines of black; 
lesser wing-coverts, brownish ash, wing-quills, 
very pale slate, dusky at the tips; lower part 
of the back and sides under the wings, brownish 
black, crossed with regular zigzag lines of 
whitish; vent, rump, tail, and tail-coverts, 
black ; legs and feet, dark ash. 

" The female has the upper part of the head 
dusky brown, rest of the head and part of the 
neck, a light, sooty brown ; upper part of the 



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222 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

breast, ashy brown, broadly skirted with whit- 
ish; back, dark ash, with little or no appear- 
ance of white penciling ; wings, bill and feet 
nearly alike in both sexes. The male of this 
species has a large, fiat, bony labyrinth on the 
bottom of the wind-pipe, very much like that of 
the canvass-back, but smaller ; over one of its 
concave sides is spread an exceeding thin, 
transparent skin or membrane. The intestines 
are of great width, and measure six feet in 
length.'' 

After the red-head we have the bald-pate, or 

AMERICAN WIDGEON. 

ANAS AMERICANA. 

Description. — "The widgeon, or bald-pate, 
measures twenty-two inches in length, and 
thirty inches in extent ; the bill is of a slate 
color; the nail, black; the front and crown, 
cream colored, sometimes nearly white, the 
feathers inflated ; from the eye, backwards to 
the middle of the neck behind, extends a band 
of deep glossy green, gold, and purple ; throat, 
chin, and sides of the neck before, as far as the 
green extends, dull yellowish white, thickly 
speckled with black; breast and ^ hind part of 



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DUCK SHOOTING. 223 

the neck, hoary bay, running in under the 
wings, where it is crossed with fine, waving 
lines of black; whole belly, white; vent, black; 
back and scapulars, black, thickly and beauti- 
fully crossed with ^undulating lines of vinous 
bay ; lower part of the back, more dusky ; tail- 
coverts, long, pointed, whitish, crossed as the 
back; tail, pointed, brownish ash; the two 
middle feathers an inch longer than the rest, 
and tapering ; shoulder of the wing, brownish 
ash; wing-coverts immediately below, white, 
forming a large spot; primaries, brownish ash; 
middle secondaries, black, glossed with green, 
forming the speculum; tertials, black, edged 
with white, between which, and the beauty 
spot, several of the secondaries are white. 

" The female has the whole head and neck yel- 
lowish white, thickly speckled with black, very 
little rufous on the breast; the back is dark 
brown. The young males, as usual, very much 
like the females on the first season, and do not 
receive their full plumage until the second year. 
They are also subject to a regular change every 
spring and fall." 

To this description of Wilson's, Brewer adds 
the following remarks concerning the European 
widgeon : 



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224 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

" This species (the American) is closely al- 
lied to the European widgeon. They seem to 
meet each other about the Artie circle ; that of 
the American extending beyond it, and that of 
Europe reaching to the European verge. The 
bird of Europe, except in the breeding season, 
is mostly an inhabitant of the sea-shore ; during 
a severe winter, a few stray inland to the larger 
lakes and rivers, but as soon as a recurrence of 
moderate weather takes place, they return to 
their more favorite feeding grounds. In Britain 
they are mostly migratory, and at the first com- 
mencement of our hard weather, are found in 
vast flocks on the flatter coasts, particularly 
where there are beds of muscles, and other 
shell-fish.. During the day, they rest and plume 
themselves on the higher shelves, or doze buoy- 
ant on the waves, and only commence their 
activity with the approach of twilight. At this 
time they become clamorous, and rising in 
dense flocks from their day's resort, proceed to 
the feeding grounds, generally according with 
the wind in the same tract. At the commence- 
ment of winter, they are fat and delicate, much 
sought after by sportsmen, and are killed by per- 
sons lying in watch in the track of the known 
flight, or what, in some parts, is called slaking. 



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DUCK SHOOTING. 225 

The most propitious night for this sport is about 
half moon, and strong wind; the birds then fly 
low, and their approach is easily known by the 
whistling of their wings, and there own shrill cry ; 
whence their coast-name of Hew. 

"They are subject to annual change of plum- 
age. Mr. Ord mentions, that a few of these 
birds breed annually in the marshes in the 
neighborhood of Duck Creek, in the state of 
Delaware. An acquaintance of the editor's 
brought him thence, in the month of June, an 
egg, which had been taken from a nest situated 
in a cluster of alders." 

Next to the widgeon comes the black-head, or 

SCAUP DUCK. 

ANAS MARILLA. 

Called the Blue-bill on the Delaware and the Black-head on the 
Chesapeake. 

Description. — " This duck is nineteen inches 
in length, and twenty-nine in extent ; bill, broad, 
generally of a light blue, sometimes of a dusky 
lead color; irides, reddish; head, tumid, covered 
with plumage of a dark, glossy green, extending 
half way down the neck ; rest of the neck and 
breast, black, spreading round to the back ; ba6k 



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226 KRIDEK'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

and scapulars, white, thickly crossed with wav- 
ing lines of black ; lesser coverts, dusky, pow- 
dered with veins of whitish ; primaries and ter- 
tials, brownish black ; secondaries, white, tipped 
with black, forming the speculum; rump and 
tail-coverts, black ; tail, short, rounded, and of a 
dusky brown; belly, white, crossed near the 
vent with waving lines of ash ; legs and feet, 
dark slate. Such is the color of the bird in its 
perfect state. Young birds vary considerably, 
some having the head black, mixed with gray 
and purple, others the back dusky, with little or 
no white, and that irregularly dispersed. The 
female has the front and sides of the same white; 
head and half of the neck, blackish brown; 
breast, spreading round the back, a dark sooty 
brown, broadly skirted with whitish; back, 
black, thinly sprinkled with grains of white; 
vent, whitish ; wings, the same as the male. 

" The windpipe of the male of this species is 
of large diameter : the labjnrinth, similar to some 
others, though not of the largest kind ; it has 
something of the shape of a single cockle shell ; 
its open side, or circular rim, covered with a 
thin, transparent skin. Just before the wind- 
pipe enters this, it lessens its diameter at least 
two-thirds, and assumes a flattish form." 



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DUCK SHOOTING. 227 

The use of this labyrinth in the trachea of 
this and others of the genus, is, doubtless for the 
production of certain peculiar sounds, by which 
the bird communicates different emotions to its 
fellows. 

The three last described ducks are all com- 
panions of the canvass-back, and like it, feed 
upon the same aquatic plant, a species of valisi- 
neria, which abounds upon the submerged flats 
at the head- waters of the Chesapeake. It grows 
in from seven to nine feet water, has a narrow 
blade, four or five feet in length, and a delicate, 
semi-translucent root, like very small celery. 
The canvass-back, which is the most expert 
diver, tears the grass from the shoals with its 
strong bill, eating only the root, while the others 
regale themselves on the rejected part, or the 
blade. They are, however, accused on good 
evidence, of occasionally snatching the entire 
plant from the bill of their provider, the instant 
that it re-appears, and this species of petty larceny 
is especially charged upon the widgeon, which, 
besides being of a lively, mercurial disposition, 
is known never to dive, except when dodging a 
pursuing boat, and too much crippled to take 
wing. The canvass-back often resents this in- 
jury, and the feeding ground is the scene of 



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228 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

many a squabble, precisely similar in character 
to those which are every day witnessed among 
our tame fowl, on the pond and in the barn- 
yard. 

All these ducks stool readily, except the wid- 
geon, which is apt to soar and make off as it 
nears the battery, often giving the alarm, in this 
way, to whole flocks of other ducks, which'are 
on the fly for the decoys. On, this account it is 
rather in bad odor with the shooters of Havre 
de Grace, who, while watching the J30X from the 
scow, rarely fail to exult in 'the fall of a bald- 
pate. 

Canvass-backs, however, afford the best sport, 
as they fly more compactly and dart better than 
any other species of duck. In eluding their 
pursuers by diving, milling round and swim- 
ming under water, when pinioned, they are only 
equalled by the scaup-duck, and a chase after a 
crippled "hickory quaker" or a " bay black-head," 
is sometimes only to be succcessfuUy ended by 
driving them into very shoal water, where they 
are speedily knocked in the head. 

Late in the fall of the year 18 — , while par- 
tridge shooting in the neighborhood of the Chesa- 
peake, we received an invitation from Mr. J. W. 
McCullough, of Port Deposit, to accompany him 



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DUCK SHOOTING. 229 

on an excursion in a new scow, which he had 
built and equipped after the most approved man- 
ner, especially to kill ducks in the Susquehanna 
and the upper bay. She was wall- sided and 
flat-bottomed, forty feet long and nine feet beam. 
She carried a jib and a large fore and aft main- 
sail. A space barely sufficient for a tall man to 
lie at length, was decked off forward, and con- 
tained three or four bunks and a small stove, 
besides the stooling guns, several bags of heavy 
shot and kegs of ducking powder, not to speak 
of a quart coffee-pot and two large baskets of 
provender. This was the hardy duck-shooter's 
cabin ; it was well pitched so as to be waterlight, 
and was entered by a small scuttle with a slide ; 
here he cooked, eat, slept, kept tally of his game, 
manufactured the heads and necks of decoys, 
cut his gun-wads, spun his yarns, drank his grog 
or coffee, and kept care outside from October 
until April, during the severest season of the 
year. 

The scow's rudder was set on a pivot so as to 
be readily unshipped in case of necessity, or to 
be used like the steering-oar of a whale boat, in 
throwing her head around. She had large lee- 
boards, which enabled her to lie very close to the 
wind in moderate weather, though from her 
15 



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230 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

shape and her being all above water, she was 
sure to make much leeway in a rough sea. 
Going large in fair weather she sailed and steered 
well, and in fact, was just the sort of craft which 
is especially adapted for navigating the shoal 
water of the upper bay. 

Midships rested the battery or " sunk-box," of 
which we shall soon have occasion to speak, and 
piled up in great heaps abaft on either side, but 
so as not to interfere with the motions of the 
rudder, were the decoys or wooden ducks, each 
having its cord, with the weight attached, wound 
round its body, the last turn being taken round 
the neck, regular duck-shooter fashion. They 
had evidently seen service from their bleached 
and weather-beaten looks. Some of them bore 
the appearance of having been recently pretty 
well peppered in the way of business, and par- 
ticles of grass might still be seen adhereing to 
the anchors and cables of a few of the upper- 
most. The scow was famished with raft-poles, 
and heavy oars or sweeps to be used in forcing 
her over the flats in a calm, and two large, 
four-oared, flat-bottomed boats, called yawls, 
towed astern. 

At two o'clock on a cold, clear morning, we 
set off from McCuUough's hospitable roof, and 



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DUCK SHOOTING. 231 

traversing the single, straggling street, reached 
the scow at Wilmer's wharf, where we found 
the helmsman and the boy waiting for us on 
board. The fastenings were cast off, and getting 
clear of the rafts, we run up the jib, and with 
the wind fresh from nor'-west, stood down along 
the shore, which is bold, and could be just seen 
from the scow, with here and there the white 
front of a dwelling, looming up above the town 
in the dim glimmer of the star-light. It was our 
intention to set the battery on Devil's Island, so 
called, though in reality it is nothing but a 
sunken shoal, lying nearly south-west from 
Havre de Grace^ and on the western side of the 
swash, or channel through the submerged flats. 
These last, be it understood by the general rea- 
der, extend for eight miles or more from the 
mouth of the river to the island of Spesutia, and 
are the feeding grounds on which tens of thou- 
sands of the choicest species of ducks, are annu- 
ally slaughtered by the market-shooters of Havre 
de Grace. Below Spesutia the water is deeper, 
but from the island to Havre de Grace the ship- 
channel is, so to speak, but a mere "swash." 
This entire ground, from the slight rise of the 
tide, and from the fact of its being thickly 
covered with grass, which is the food of the 



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232 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

fowl, and serves also to break the force of the 
seas, which roll in from the lower bay, is especi- 
ally suited for the operations of the floating 
batteries. 

It was our good fortune to be accompanied on 
this excursion by an old friend from the city, 
whom we encountered at Port Deposit, and after 
seeing the mainsail set, and the craft fairly under 
way, steering for Havre de Grace light, we 
retired to the cabin, to while away the time by 
listening to the sporting experience of the owner 
of the scow, or by chatting over adventures of 
the past. Passing Havre de Grace, we found 
the duck shooters of that place already on the 
stir, and were successively hailed by Baird, 
Holly and other famous shots, who were prepar- 
ing to drop down to their respective anchoring 
grounds. 

Coming to, at last, just as the moon rose, we 
dropped anchor on the shoal, and waited impa- 
tiently until within a half an hour of daybreak, 
when, all things else being in readiness, we 
went to work transferring the decoys into the 
boats, and launching the battery over the side. 
This last was done by our united strength as 
carefully as possible, so as to avoid shipping 
water into the box, McCuUough then stepped 



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DUCK SHOOTING. 233 

into the box, unfolded the floating wings 
and turned up the guards; several pigs of iron, 
sufficiently heavy to sink the frame of the battery 
to the water's edge, were handed in ; a board, 
covered with a blanket, was then laid over these 
on the bottom of the sunken box, and after re- 
ceiving the guns and ammunition, the occupant 
pushed off from the scow with his boat-hook, 
while we jumped into the yawl to tow the 
machine head to wind on the selected spot, and 
assist in setting the stools. The former was 
then anchored stem and stern, and by the wan- 
ing light of the moon we proceeded to dispose the 
decoys, in the arrangement of which McCul- 
. lough, like most expert duck-shooters, was very 
fastidious. 

They were placed so as to ride freely without 
coming in contact with each other, principally 
at the stern and on either hand of the side wings, 
the perfection of the art appearing to be to avoid 
leaving a gap in any part of the rank, and yet to 
prevent, if possible, the ducks from falling 
foul. A few of the lightest were placed imme- 
diately on the wings, and several heads of de- 
coys were firmly fixed on wooden pins on the 
deck of the battery. The false ducks were not 
all imitations of canvass-backs, but had red- 



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234 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

heads, black-heads, and a few bald-pates, inter- 
mingled with the nobler variety. The outside 
duck at the tail of the rank was a veteran can- 
vass-back, facetiously called the toller. 

The rank being now complete and made to 
mimic life to admiration by the action of the 
ripples, — as each duck rode knowingly to its 
anchor, — and the frame in which the box was 
set flush with the water's edge, yet preserved 
from filling by the floating wings fore and aft, 
and at the sides, of course, the box being deep 
enough to receive the body of a man laid at 
length, must be sunk some eighteen inches be- 
low the surface, and the shooter himself, in his 
watery ambuscade, perfectly invisible to the 
passing ducks, except from the air immediately 
over his head. The water being moderately 
smooth, the guards were then turned down flat 
with the deck, and while the boats pulled back 
to the scow, which immediately lifted her an- 
chor, the shooter loaded his three guns, and 
placing them in the box with their muzzles rest- 
ing on its edge, took a last look at his decoys ; 
then observing daylight breaking in the east, he 
laid himself flat on his back on the board, and 
shut out from every object and every sound, save 
the pale, dull sky and the slight, rippling plash 



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DUCK SHOOTING. 235 

within an inch of his head, — all eye and ear, 
waited patiently for his first dart. 

We had hardly anchored about a half a mile 
higher np, so as not to interfere with the flight 
of the game, which, as a rule, work to wind- 
ward and of course come up to leeward of the 
shooter, or at his feet, before we heard the faint 
report of his gun, although it was not sufficiently 
light to see either the ducks or the decoys from 
the scow. 

The boy continued to report shot after shot, 
while we were engaged in eating our breakfast 
in the cabin, and as we came out, Davis, the 
helmsman, directed our attention to a large flock 
of canvass-backs, some of whom he swore in his 
emphatic way, '*were going into the pot." 
Glancing along the broad expanse of water on 
which the sun had now risen, we plainly saw 
the ducks sweeping swiftly up to the tail of the 
decoys, among which the foremost had hardly 
alighted, before you saw the dark figure of 
McCuUough rise from the water as if by magic — 
then the successive discharges, and the white 
water occasioned by the fall of each duck, the 
helmsman counting five down. The next instant 
the shooter was standing up, waving his cap, 
and jumping into the yawl with Ben Davis, we 



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236 KRIDBR'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

pulled away with might and main to secure the 
dead ducks. 

Fifteen canyass-backs and three red-heads 
were picked up, two of these, which were crip- 
pled, being shot over, as the phrase goes, with 
a small gun loaded with number eight. We 
then rowed straight for the battery, in which 
McCuUough now insisted that we should take 
our turn. There was no time to argue matters 
with ducks on the fly ; so landing on one side of 
the deck, while he came off at the other, we took 
our place in some trepidation of spirit, years have 
been intervened since we had drawn trigger on 
wild fowl, if we except occasionally knocking 
over a crippled sprig- tail or mallard on the snipe 
grounds. The remembrance that our friend 
from Philadelphia was a capital duck-shot, by 
no means tended to allay this feeling, and it was 
not until the sound of oars had died away on our 
ears, and we felt ourselves, as it were, alone with 
the decoys, which kept bobbing their heads as if 
they were actually swallowing duck- weed with 
the greatest possible gusto, and shifting their 
bearings with inimitable gravity, that we re- 
gained our wonted nerve, and made up our mind 
to mischief. The next moment our ears were 
saluted by the whistling of fowls' wings, and the 



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DUCK SHOOTING. 237 

patter of their feet in the act of alighting on the 
left of the battery ; seizing the small gun we sat 
up in the box and knocked over one canvass- 
back swimming among the stools, and a second 
as it rose, and catching up the second gun fired 
ineflfectually at two others making' off; then 
charging the pieces, cast a glance at the dead 
birds to ascertain the direction of their drift, and 
sank back out of sight, without as much as look- 
ing at the scow, feeling very certain that had 
the presence of mind, in which we felt so assured 
before, governed our actions, all four ducks 
would have been at that moment floating dead 
on the tide. In fact, gentle reader, in the unex- 
cusable heat of the moment, a great blunder had 
been committed in shooting at the ducks in the 
water, when we should have first drawn trigger 
on those yet upon the wing, but in the act of 
dropping their stems, to alight outside of the 
first; when we should have used the second gun 
on the others, which would have still been with- 
in available distance. Had Fred been there, we 
thought, he would have had four ducks down; 
but, n' importey let them come again. 

But at least ten minutes of expectation elapsed 
before another shot was obtained, during which 
time, to recover our coolness, we watched the 



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238 KRiDER's Sporting anecdotes. 

motion of a red-head decoy, close to the after 
wing. A comical-looking, hard-a-weather old 
fellow he was, with the nail of his bill shot off 
and his head turned over his back, and there he 
kept veering and bowing, now looking us right 
in the eye over the edge of the wings, as he 
topped a small surge, and now disappearing from 
our sight again, — when, all at once, a small flock 
of black-heads appeared, setting their wings to 
alight, as it seemed right over him, and rising 
more coolly this time, we managed to kill three 
out of seven and cripple down a fourth, without 
finding occasion to use the second gun, the sur- 
vivors going off so swiftly to our right, that they 
were far to leeward by the time we had turned. 
After this we had pretty shooting for about an 
hour,' when Davis came out to relieve us, Fred 
preferring to take his turn in the afternoon, as 
the swell was sinking fast with the wind, and in 
a half an hour it bade fair to be calm. Accord- 
ingly Davis had not fired more than a half a 
dozen shots, killing a canvass-back at each dis- 
charge, before the water was as smooth as a mill- 
pond; our own decoys and those of one or two 
other batteries at a still greater distance, loomed 
up on the glassy flood as large as geese; the 
ducks ceased to stool, and we passed away the 



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PUCK SHOOTING. 239 

time until noon chatting, and examining the 
game, which lay ranged in pairs on the thwart- 
boards, or starting up as the report of Davis' gun 
told of an occasional shot at a single duck, pass- 
ing over his stools, on its way up or down the 
bay. 

While we were at dinner a circumstance hap- 
pened at the battery, which almost caused Davis 
to avow himself a believer in the doctrine of pre- 
destination, at least as regards wild fowl shoot- 
ing. Not having had a shot for some time, he 
was lying at his ease vdth his cap drawn over 
his eyes to defend them from the vertical rays of 
the sun, when a swan passed slowly over his de- 
coys, and strange to say, every gun in the battery 
missed fire, and the noble bird continued its course 
down the bay unharmed. 

*'I had drawn for his neck," said the unfortu- 
nate duck-shooter, " and was as sure of him as I 
was of my supper ; but the Walker caps are not 
worth the copper they are made of any more, 

and I suppose the d d bird would have gone 

free, if I had fired the biggest swivel-gun on the 
Potomac at his head, at the same distance." 

" No doubt of it," said we ; there is no fight- 
ing against fate — but to change the subject, were 
you ever caught in a heavy blow in one of these 
tubs, Ben?" 



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240 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

" Was I?" he echoed, looking sideways at us, 
while he kept his swarthy face turned like a 
wall towards the box, in which Fred was now 
lying; "you see, sir, we left Annapolis that 
morning bound for the Potomac for a change of 
ground; the wind was west when we started, 
but soon hauled to N. N. E. and then back to 
north, blowing a regular persimmon gale. I was 
at the helm — Tom painting decoys, — when the 
sail jibed and she came head to in spite of us — 
shipped three seas in less than three minutes — 
a hogshead of water at each sea — lost all the 
decoys overboard — started the sunk-box — tore 
mainsail from the gaff, and had to run into Cove 
Point harbor, eight miles from Patuxet river, 
where we lay snug enough until it had spit its 
spite.'' 

"A good harbor that?'' we asked by way of 
passing time. 

" Ay," said he, " the best on the Chesapeake — 

a perfect basin — but d n that swan and the 

hen that hatched him! I don't care for the 
value of the bird, sir — I've seen acres on acres 
of 'em at a time, mixed in with geese, — but by 
the North Pole, it was enough to make a man 
forswear father and mother and turn Turk to 
lose the shot." 



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DUCK SHOOTING. 241 

*' But where did you see swans by the acre?" 
said we. 

"Where?" he repyeated, "why in a dozen 
places, to be sure ; but the most I ever did see, 
was on a sandbar, with rocks at its head, that 
makes up and covers the mouth of the Yeoco* 
moco river. There's two bars, by the way, both 
making from the mainland, one up from the 
mouth of the river, and the other down ; there's 
not a foot of water on either bar; you must stand 
up between the two, or you'll stick. Both bars 
were covered with geese and swans, and when 
they got up a half a mile oflf, they made a noise 
like all old Nick's hounds in full cry; — ^but there 
goes a small dart of red-heads — no, they've 
turned — yes — there they go — there they go, 
straight for the decoys — four ducks down !" 

" Ay," said McCullough, " Mr. W. shoots 
ducks well ; I've been out with him before ; he's 
quite as sure in the box as you or I, Ben." 

" Ay," answered Ben, "it may be, in moderate 
weather and when the ducks come well up : but 
what would he do in the box in a heavy swell, 
with the wind as keen as a knife, on a December 
day?" 

" 0h !" said McCullough, " that is a horse of 
another color. The clouds are moving in the 



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242 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

nor'-west ; we shall have the breeze in the old 
quarter." 

" Here it comes," said Ben, " we shall kill 
ducks fast before sun-down." 

'•Whose scow is that anchored in shore in a 
line with yon bluff, Ben?" 

" Baird's, I reckon," answered Ben, " and he 
has had shooting ; the ducks have been flying 
that way all the morning." 

The wind soon freshened, and the bay was 
all animation again, the ducks flying in large 
flocks, the batteries cannonading, boats plying 
to and fro, and Fred shooting in a style not to be 
surpassed. The pufis of smoke rising from the 
water's edge, reminded us strongly of the hur- 
ried glimpse which a sailor sometimes gets of a 
white jet or spout, when he turns his head for a 
moment, while pulling to windward in chase of 
a gallied sperm whale ; and the sight of a dark 
figure suddenly seen standing apparently on the 
water a half a mile off, and then as suddenly 
sinking again, bore some resemblance to a much 
rarer sight, a whale's head thrust vertically out 
of the sea, seen from the masthead at the hori- 
zon's verge on a clear day. 

In the course of the afternoon Davis and our- 
selves had a sharp chase after a crippled duck ; 



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DUCK SHOOTING. 243 

from the trouble it gave us we both supposed it 
to be a canvass-back, but after being killed at 
last by a snap shot, it proved to be a black- 
head.* 

Fred continued in the box during the whole 
afternoon, and as far as our remembrance serves 
us, did not miss a single duck. At sun-down we 
pushed off from the scow to " take up." While 
securing the decoys, a canvass-back darted twice 
between the boats and the battery, and return- 
ing a third time was killed by our city friend 
who was still in the box. We have often ob- 
served this sort of infatuation in the most wary 
and shy of the feathered race ; time after time 
in the falcon tribe, and even in the common 
crow. We have shot hawks in close pursuit of 
woodpeckers and other small birds in an open 
field, and in one instance, after witnessing from 
the barn-yard a very interesting chase between 
the Falco Columharius and a tame pigeon. 



* It is remarkable that a dog accustomed to retrieving ducks 
from the water, will give over the chase after a crippled canvass- 
back, as soon as he perceives the object of his pursuit is able to 
make a long stretch or two beneath the surface. Experience has 
taught him that all his skill and sagacity are thrown away, when 
brought into competition with this cunning and powerful duck. 
The large channel black-heads, or those which frequent the bay, 
are almost as long breathed and as deep divers. 



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244 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

killed the former but a few feet behind the lat- 
ter, which, but for the timely rescue, must 
inevitably have become its prey.* 

Taking out the dogs during the past winter, 
they pointed a single crow, which being busily 
engaged in digging some object from the ground, 
allowed us to come within ten yards of it, al- 
though we had a gun in our hands at the time, 
which circumstance, gentle reader, while it 
rather invalidates the popular notion that the 
crow is able to scent powder, shows that the 
eye of the bird was fully engaged with the ob- 
ject on the ground, and did not in reality see us 
or the dogs, until its attention was attracted by 
the sound of our approach. The study of the 
vision of birds is one of the most beautiful and 
interesting departments of natural history ; with 
the exception of that of flying, perhaps, the 

* When we first noticed the hawk, it was some distance down 
the wind in the act of darting upon the pigeon, which it missed. 
The pursuit was then continued, both parties beating to windward 
by short tacks, the pigeon occasionally putting about with great 
adroitness when hard pressed, and gradually nearing the bam, as 
the one redoubled its exertions to come up, and the other to escape, — 
until when fairly within shot, we decided the matter at the Tery 
moment that the piratical cruiser of air was gaining on the chase, 
as the sailors say, hand over hand. The pigeon alit upon the 
roof of the barn, and as if sensible of its narrow escape, remained 
perfectly quiet for a considerable time. 



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DUCK SHOOTING. 245 

most SO of all to the scientific inquirer. When 
we reflect that they do not see objects as we do, 
but with a magnifying power, which, according 
to the adjustment of the focus of the eye, has 
been compared to that of the telescope or the 
microscope, there is no doubt that in each case 
we have related, the eye of the bird was, so to 
speak, so filled up with the object on which its 
vision, for the time, was earnestly bent, that it 
saw adjoining objects but very imperfectly, just 
as the falcon has been known to fly in full career 
against a tree in pursuit of a partridge, and the 
duck, after twice avoiding the men in the boats 
near the battery, met its death, at last, over the 
decoys which it was so desirous to join. ' 

Taking up some two hundred decoys on a 
cold, blustering evening, is rather tedious and 
benumbing work to a novice. While one person 
manages the oars, the others pick up each duck 
singly, so as not to entangle it with its fellows, 
and, after winding the cord round its body and 
removing the weed from the weight, stow it away 
in the bow or stern of the yawl. In the mean- 
time the man in the box, laying aside his guns, 
secures the few ducks near the wings, turns up 
the guards, and as soon as the stools are all in 
the boat, weighs the anchors of the battery, and 
16 



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246 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

is towed down to the scow. The contents of the 
boats and the box are then passed on board, and 
lastly the battery itself; after which sail is made 
for home. 

On reaching Havre de Grace, we went into 
Baird's hotel, where the duck shooters of the 
place are in the habit of congregating to talk 
over the exploits of the day.* 

These men are both fishers and fowlers, being 
engaged during the spring and part of the sum- 
mer, in the extensive fisheries of the Potomac 
and Susquehanna, and returning to their more 
congenial occupation in autumn. They are 
generally well informed on all matters connected 
with their business, — sometimes even acute, 
and some of them realize handsome profits in 
their hardy and exciting pursuits. They are 
almost universally expert shots; indeed, it is 

* While harboring in a creek on the eastern shore, on one of our 
excursions, the necks of a fine pair of canvass-backs were eaten off 
by a mine, although they were the only brace in the lot, and had 
a number of inferior ducks hung on either side of them. In fact, 
x>ld shooters seriously declare that this little animal, which often 
swims off at night to the scows in search of plunder, knows the 
flavor of a canvass-back, and will never touch a commoner kind of 
duck when the former is to be had. Some years ago we were 
shown in the store of Mr. Lyons, at Havre de Grace, a large pet 
cat which was said to show the same epicurean delicacy of taste 
when occasion offered. 



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DUCK SHOOTING. 247 

as common for a man reared on either shore to 
shoot well, as it is for a dog in the same sections 
to swim and dive like an otter. Many of the 
poorer inhabitants train their large dogs not 
only to retrieve ducks shot from the shore, but 
also to assist in bringing in quantities of drift 
wood, which come down the stream with " a 
fresh." Some are said to supply themselves 
with winter fuel in this way. We remember to 
have watched with interest, from the Port De- 
posit side, the efforts of a large cur dog to tow in 
a fragment of lumber, after which an old negro 
had sent him out into the stream. The log was 
heavy, some distance out, and the river on the 
rise ; for some moments the old fellow was in a 
state of great excitement between hope and fear ; 
but at last the faithful animal succeeded in get- 
ting the wood into the eddy off shore, when 
Pompey showing the remains of his teeth in a 
tremendous grin, jumped into a shattered and 
leaky boat, and sculled off to his aid. 

The next morning we anchored the battery on 
the eastern shore, between Havre de Grace and 
Port, off Stump's Mill. The wind was easterly ; 
the weather cold and stormy ; and a great many 
ducks on the fly down the river. Your ears 
were constantly saluted with the whew ! whew ! 



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248 KRIDER^S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

of the widgeon — the harsh cry of the south- 
southerly — the whistling wings of the golden- 
eye — the quack of the butter-ball ; and you were 
kept constantly on the alert, knocking over can- 
vass-backs and red-heads, until near noon, when 
the wind increased to a half gale, the battery 
went adrift, the scow dragged her anchor almost 
at the same moment, while the boat was off, 
and for a while, we were, as sailors say, caught 
in a heap. Giving up the search for the dead 
ducks, we pulled might and main for the battery, 
while Fred and the boy lifted the scow's anchor, 
and hoisting the jib, ran closer in shore. On ap- 
proaching the box, we found McCuUough stand- 
ing knee deep in water, having thrown over- 
board all his iron, after driving down through 
the decoys. The battery had then brought up, 
but the waves were making a clean breach over 
the box, and the stools were in a confused state 
of entanglement and disarray. Some had been 
detached from their weights and were floating 
off*, or going on to the lee shore to caulk, as Davis 
expressed it, tumbling about on the waves as if 
in joy of their escape ; others were foul of the 
anchors under the frame of the battery, and the 
rest in a cumber; while the wind blew stiffly, in 
gusts, from the heights of the opposite shore — 



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DUCK SHOOTING. 249 

the river grew every moment more rough, and 
the tall frame of McCuUough, standing ap- 
parently on the water, and actively plying boat- 
hook, as he grappled for the anchors, reminded 
one strangely enough, in the midst of the scene, 
of the picture of Washington crossing a river 
on a raft, on his mission to Fort Le Beuf in the 
old colonial days. Working hard, it was some 
time before we secured the decoys and shipped 
the battery, when after taking a bumper of good 
old Bourbon all round, we stood over towards 
Port, beating, scow-fashion, broadside as often 
as bow on. We afterwards heard that Baird 
and several other shooters below, had drifted 
completely across the swash in their batteries 
that morning. No serious accident happened, 
and so far as we are informed, no case of drown- 
ing ever occurred in the batteries on the Chesa- 
peake. The case to which Dr. Lewis refers in 
his article on duck shooting, was occasioned by 
the sinking of an old yawl, loaded down to the 
water's edge with stones, as a substitute for a 
battery. She was struck by a sudden flaw of 
wind, and, of course, sunk, drowning her occu- 
pant, who either from inability to swim, or from 
some unexplained cause, went down with her 
in eight or nine feet of water. 



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250 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

Formerly ducks were very abundant on the 
western shore between Port Deposit and Havre 
de Grace, and great numbers are still killed 
from blinds and batteries, from the bridge, down 
to Stump's Point at the mouth of Furnace creek. 
The digging of the tide-water canal, however, : 

drove the ducks off the flats and marshes of the i 

western shore. Below Havre de Grace, on the 
western side of the swash, near Donahue's bat- 
tery, is good canvass-back and red-head ground. | 
About half a mile from the battery, to the east- 
ward, Mr. Charles Boyd of Havre de Grace, I 
killed one hundred and sixty-three canvass- 
backs, on the tenth day of November last, and 
we have been assured that in the spring of 
eighteen hundred and fifty, the same famous 
duck-shooter killed two hundred and seventy- 
one canvass-back, and red-heads off the mouth 
of North-East river, three or four miles from 
the battery. On the same day on which Boyd j 
killed his canvass-backs, near Donahue's bat- i 
tery, Mr. John Holly, another expert duck-shot, | 
belonging to the same place, killed one hundred 
and nineteen of the same species on Devil's 
Island; and it is said that several thousand 
ducks were brought into the town that day, by 
the different parties engaged in shooting on the 
flats. 



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DUCK SHOOTING. 251 

The next night we sailed for the Narrows of 
Spesutia, where we had some good shooting 
from the battery and from points. We were 
here much amused with the deportment of 
Davis, who seemed to move his eyes as on a 
pivot, while watching for ducks behind the 
rushes, keeping his head steadily fixed, all 
alive as he was, espying, giving notice, and 
knocking them down as if born to the business. 
He was also at home in. sailing and managing 
the scow, and for picking out dead ducks from 
the. yawl in a rough sea, his eyes were not to 
be excelled, except perhaps by those of McC. 
who, we believe, carried a chart of each duck's* 
drift in his pocket. While harboring in one 
of the creeks of the Narrows, we heard the 
distant booming of the swivel guns of the 
poachers, who **boat" the sleeping flocks by 
moonlight, which mode of killing ducks, though 
deservedly executed, has still a spice of adven- 
ture in it, and is so far more defensible in our 
eyes than the old, cold-blooded practice of 
strangling them in the meshes of gill nets, while 
diving for food on the shoals. 

The whole accursed French system of net- 
ting ducks, partridges, and other birds, is well 
worthy of its inventors, and although we do not 



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252 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

wish to be considered uncharitable, we cannot 
avoid quoting here two lines of Byron, leaving 
the reader to parody if he thinks proper. 
Speaking of Sir Isaac Walton, his lordship, 
who detested fishing, says : 

" The quaint old coxcomb, in his gullet 

Should have a hook, and a small trout to pull it.'' 

All varieties of the wild duck are less wary, 
and possess less intelligence than the Canada 
goose. They also evince much less affection 
for each other, and we know of no instance of 
their being domesticated, except in the case of 
the anas sponsa^ or beautiful summer duck. 
•Every fowler has noticed the sort of family in- 
terest which exists among the members of a 
flock of wild geese, which frequently leads them 
to halt, follow the descent, and wait upon the 
motions of a wounded companion. We believe 
the same traits have been observed in the 
American swan. Both are easily domesticated, 
but it is remarkable that the tamed wild goose 
and even his descendants, although herding by 
day with the domestic goose, show a disposition 
to sleep apart from the flock at night. We first 
noticed this fact on the farm of Mr. Andrew 
Lyons, of Cecil, Maryland, and were assured by 
that gentleman, that his attention had been fre- 



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DUCK SHOOTING. 253 

quently drawn to the same peculiarity. The 
goose is in fact the most wary of wild fowl, not 
excepting the swan, with which they are often 
seen associated. It is said that the latter bird 
will sleep and feed without fear, if surrounded 
by the former, the sentinels of which are ever 
on the qui vive, and are regularly relieved at 
stated periods. They are killed on our shores 
over decoys from ambuscades, or by imitating 
their honkings as the flocks pass overhead. 
They are also shot in stormy weather from 
points on the Chesapeake when the wind shuts 
them in as they fly up and down the bay. 
Many geese and swans have been killed in this 
way at Richett's Point, at the mouth of Gun- 
powder river. 



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CANADA GOOSE. 

ANAS CANADENSIS. 

Description. — " The length of this species is 
three feet; extent, five feet two inches; the bill 
is black ; irides, dark hazel ; tipper half of the 
neck, black, marked on the chin and lower part 
of the head with a large patch of white, its dis- 
tinguishing character ; lower part of the neck 
before, white; back and win^-coverts, brown, 
each feather tipped with whitish; rump and 
tail, black ; tail-coverts and vent, white ; prima- 
ries, black, reaching to the extremities of the 
tail ; sides, pale ashy brown ; legs and feet, 
blackish ash. The male and female are exactly 
alike in plumage." 

''The Canada goose," adds Brewer, "is easily 
domesticated, and it is probable that most of the 
specimens killed in Great Britain have escaped 
from preserves; it is found, however, on the 
Continent of Europe, and stragglers may occa- 
sionally occur. On the beautiful piece of water 
at Gasford House, the seat of the Earl of 



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CANADA GOOSE. 255 

Wemyss, Haddingtonshire, this and many other 
water birds rear their young freely. I have 
never seen any artificial piece of water, so beau- 
tifully adapted for the domestication and intro- 
duction of every kind of water-fowl which will 
bear the climate of Great Britain. Of very 
large extent, it is embossed in beautiful shrub- 
bery, perfectly recluse, and, even in the nearly 
constant observance of a resident family, several 
exotic species seem to look upon it as their own. 
The Canada and Egyptian geese both had 
young when I visited it, and the lovely anas 
sponsa (summer duck) seemed as healthy as in 
her native waters." 

The Potomac, however, is the grand rendezvous 
of geese and swans, where they are often seen 
in countless multitudes feeding or sanding on 
the bars, and are shot from blinds and points. 
Great numbers of ducks are also slaughtered 
on this river by swivel guns at night. The pad- 
dler lies flat on his breast, and the propelling of 
the boat in this situation is laborious and dis- 
tressing work. A duck shooter once informed 
us, that having been paddled for some distance 
close to an immense flock of canvass-backs, rid- 
ing as at anchor with their heads under their 
wings, at the mouth of a creek, he discharged 



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256 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

his heavy gun in the midst, making tremen- 
dous slaughter ; observing that his companion 
did not rise from his recumbent position at the 
report, he spoke to and touched him, but he did 
not answer or stir ; and upon turning him up 
and looking in his face, he perceived that he 
vs^as dead. The man, probably, had some 
organic disease of the heart. 

Although the men of the Chesapeake scruple 
not to aver that we have no wild fowl shooting 
worthy of the name, on the Delaware, for all 
that, as we sit in our sanctum, we seem to see, 
with prophetic eye, a host of grizzled, weather- 
beaten faces ready to start up, amid a terrible 
quacking and honking, to tell them a different 
tale. In fact, it is upon the Delaware, that the 
greatest skill and fertility of stratagem are 
brought into play, in paddling to the best ad- 
vantage upon the watchful mallard, (anas 
boschas) — the wary black duck, (anas obsura) 
— the shy sprig-tail, (anas acuta) — the swift 
butter-ball or biiffel-headed duck, (anas albeola) 
— the lively blue-bill or scaup duck, (anas 
marilla) — the restless south-southerly, (anas 
glacialis) — the delicate little teal of either va- 
riety, and many others. Until the sportsman 
has laid his ear, as it were, to the light ripple 



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CANADA GOOSE. 257 

at the bow of his skiff, as propelled by the prac- 
tised hand of the paddler, she goes gliding on 
to the wary fowl, — and has waited in breathless 
suspense for the significant touch, which bids 
him rise and deliver his fire in the midst of the 
startled rank, — and after boating the dead and 
wounded, has re-loaded the big gun and again 
stretched to his oars; or until he has floated 
down in his whitened skiff among the drifting 
ice, within raking distance of the flock, or, per- 
haps, close to the snow-cake where the ducks 
set huddled in the sun — until he has done this, 
he has by no means fathomed all the sweet mys- 
teries of fowl shooting, although he may have 
annually killed countless scores of nobler game, 
from the floating batteries, or the famous point- 
preserves of the Chesapeake. 

How often has the fowler on the Delaware 
had occasion to remark, that the single circum- 
stance of the drift of the disguised skiff, being 
greater than that of the masses of ice among 
which it floats, has alarmed the wary geese on 
which he was stealing with the tide, assisted by 
an almost imperceptible motion of the paddle, 
and how often, after having unshipped his oars, 
and laid himself flat on his face in his floating 
ambuscade, has he been disappointed of a glori- 



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258 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

ous shot, by the untimely presence of a single 
black-duck among a flock of mallards or teal. 
Again, on the other hand, how often, after hav- 
ing arranged his reserved guns, and taken a last 
look at the locks of his long torn, has he been 
paddled by the cunning hand of a Wilson, a 
Stinsman, an Everly or a Conner, under the 
cover of some sinuosity in the shore, into the 
very midst of a flock of sprig- tails, feeding on 
the edge of a flat, at the bottom of some unfre- 
quented cove ; and rising with mischief in his 
heart, has poured the contents of the deadly 
barrels in the thick of the affrighted game, 
which, as if appalled at the sudden ap- 
pearance of their enemy, cluster confusedly to- 
gether as they rise : or early in October, how 
often has he dropped down the river on some 
clear, moonlight night, to set his stools, by the 
first glimmer of dawn, on the upper end of Tini- 
cum or Maiden islands, or upon Martin's or 
Smith's bars, or some equally favorable spot for 
the flight of the dusky duck, or the blue-winged 
teal. Having hidden the skiff on the reedy 
marsh, and heard the fvhir and whiz of passing 
wings before it was yet suSiciently light to 
shoot, as day breaks and the stools are more dis- 
tinctly seen riding on the misty tide, with a 



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CANADA GOOSE. 259 

beating heart he beholds a large flock of teal 
drop as if from the clouds among the rank, and 
at once raking them where tliey sit in the 
thickest cluster, discharges his second barrel 
with deadly effect as they rise. After this, per- 
haps, as the sky grows still clearer, looking 
towards the eastern horizon, he sees just above 
the rising sun a small black cloud no bigger 
than his hand; as he looks it becomes appa- 
rently larger, when not daring to move hand or 
foot or even an eyelid, he lies close as death 
itself; with his finger on the guard, waiting for 
the instant to fire at the ranks of the dusky duck. 
If the morning be still and calm they will most 
probably soar too high for his piece ; but, perhaps, 
the winds blow a half a gale over the troubled 
expanse of water and the decaying herbage of 
the shore ; in that case they will stool or fly 
low, and if he shoots at the proper moment, be 
almost certain to pay toll. A little later in the 
morning, while sailing up the river towards the 
New Bar — the ducks having ceased to stool 
below — ^the shooter espies some dark object 
moving on the edge of the marshy shore ; ex- 
amined with a spy-glass, it proves to be a little 
blue-winged teal apparently playing in circles 
on the water; the mast is instantly struck; 



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260 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

upon looking again, perhaps, a second bird is 
seen engaged in the same playful manoeuvres ; 
and a few yards further up on the mud, close to 
the reeds or spatter-docks, the whole flock is 
discovered sitting in close companionship in the 
sun. They are probably fast asleep; the out- 
siders carelessly swimming on the water are the 
sentries; and to approach the flock without 
alarming these, is the ])oint. In this case, the 
shooter either lands at a distance and pushes 
the skiff* before him over the flat, concealing 
himself as much as possible behind her, and 
thus silently and laboriously works within shot; 
or trusting to the skill of the paddler, he lies 
close in the boat, which is slowly and stealthily 
propelled in the direction of the game, until, 
perhaps, a distance not exceeding the point 
blank range of an ordinary fowling piece is 
attained, and death descends in a leaden 
shower on the sleepers, whom the sports of 
their heedless companions have betrayed. In 
fact, though shooting from the battery is sufii- 
ciently exciting, when t»he game comes fast to 
the decoys, it cannot compare in point of ad- 
venture and interest with paddle shooting as 
practised on the Delaware. 

We have, indeed, spent many a joyous hour, 



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CANADA GOOSE. 261 

blazing away from the ambuscade at the noble 
ducks of the Chesapeake ; or lying in the Sus- 
quehanna, with Port Deposit and its heights in 
sight, listening to the lip-lap of the slight surge 
at our ears— or, perhaps, watching the curious 
little water-witch,* as she suddenly emerged 
among the stools, swimming warily round and 
round the battery, as if sent out on a reconnoi- 
tering excursion from a rank of canvass-backs, 
which rode the ripples at a distance off Mount 
Ararat;! — but for all this, we shall never know 
again the supreme delight with which we bent 
to our oars among the drifting masses of ice and 
snow, and listened to the " bald, disjointed chat" 
of the paddler, on some sunny, mid-winter's 
morn; or suspended stroke as his experienced 
eye caught some dark object on the ice, which 
the glass revealed to be a flock of sprig-tails 
basking in the sun ; or examined the guns, and 
laid us down to drift on in silent expectancy 
only broken by the wary whispers of our com- 
panion — the caw of some hungry crow, or the 
thump of a passing cake on the skiff's bow ; or 
started up at his signal to deal death and con- 
sternation among the affrighted objects of our 

* Pied-bill Dob-chick — Fodiceps Carolinensis, 
t A height bo called near Port Deposit. 

17 



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S62 KRIDER'S SPOBTINa ANECDOTES. 

aim, and rejoicing in the sport, boated the birds, 
reloaded the gnns, and again stretched away to 
the oars to keep the brisk blood in full flow : 
gentle reader there is a rare pleasure in this, 
which the thirst for preference, or the absorbing 
desire of gain never can bestow — a pleasure with 
which the most successful day's shooting from 
the battery, can never compare. Much skill and 
presence of mind are, however, required in box- 
shooting, and we would advise every sportsman 
who has never been placed in this peculiar posi- 
tion, to give it a trial for once. He need not be 
concerned if unprovided with a life-preserver, 
since in spite of their serious recommendation 
by a recent writer, we assure him that the dan- 
ger is less than that which every mortal expe- 
riences, in crossing the Delaware in a ferry 
boat. 

To those who have leisure and a desire to 
engage in paddle-shooting, we say go. to Krider's 
^nd select one of his splendid double ducking 
guns ; purchase a good skiff with her appurte- 
nances complete; hire an expert paddler, and 
our word for it, you will find the sport one of the 
most invigorating and delightful recreations in 
the world. The agreeable change of element — 
the pleasurable thrill which almost every one 



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CANADA GOOSE. 263 

feels afloat — the healthful exercise in the bracing 
air — the extent of prospect, and the lurking de- 
sire for burning friar Bacon's astounding com- 
pound in something of a little larger calibre than 
your snipe gun, are amply sufficient to drive off 
ermuiy malaise j or any other moping malady 
with a French name, which fashionable flesh is 
heir to. Besides this, you have the wary game 
ahead, and that argus-eyed, grizzly-pated mortal 
astern, with stores and stores of fowling experi- 
ence under his wild and weather-beaten front, if 
so you have tact enough to draw him out. It is 
rather superfluous, to say nothing of savoring a 
little of self-conceit, for some sporting writers of 
the day to expatiate at such remarkable length, 
on the dreadful hardships and direful dangers of 
duck-shooting. 

To listen to such hyperborean arguments as 
*' pelting rains," "driving snows," "whistling 
winds," and "freezing waters," — ^followed up by 
"wardrobes of water-proof coats," "legions of 
stout hearts," and "life preservers;" one would 
almost suppose that they were bound on a cruise 
to Nova Zembla, or the North Pole ; whereas all 
this comical parade of old winter's icy attributes 
shrinks into mere verbiage, when compared with 
the exulting sense of the real thing itself Give 



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264 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

US, gentlemen, all your experience in shooting ; 
initiate us a little into the mystery of those fasci- 
nating pursuits, which possess such seductive 
charms for one-third of mankind ; but, for mercy 
sake, do not frighten us tyros, ye old campaigners, 
with ominous hints of undivulged but awful ex- 
posures — piteous d escriptions of over-night double 
B tricks upon travellers, the mere thoughts of 
which are enough to make one's blood creep. 
The truth is, there is no sport, with which we 
are acquainted, better adapted to set up mind 
and body, and we know of more lives than one 
saved by paddle-shooting on the Delaware. 

On the flats canvass-backs may be distin- 
guished from other ducks by their incessant 
diving, and in the air they are known by the 
wedge-like shape which the flock assumes, and 
the superior altitude of their flight to and from 
the feeding grounds. The shooters on the 
Chesapeake recognize them with the naked eye 
a great distance. We were assured by a 
veteran sportsman that, under the cover of the 
long, thick grass which covers a large portion 
of the island of Spesutia, he was once enabled 
to SLpproach, on the leeward shore, within fifty 
yards of a large flock composed entirely of this 
noble wild fowl. He described them as wholly 



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CANADA GOOSE. 265 

unsuspicious of his proximity on the point, 
being constantly engaged in diving and re- 
appearing, while the water around was mud- 
died and strewn with blades of grass, which 
they had torn up from the shoal. With the ex- 
ception of an occasional squabble when one 
individual endeavored to rob another of its prize, 
they were very silent; but had there been a 
number of widgeons or red-heads among them, 
our informant supposed the harmony of the feast 
had been more frequently disturbed. Occasion- 
ally an old duck raised its body on the water, 
and seemed to look warily around; then, as 
another came up beside it, the former took its 
turn at diving, so that the whole flock was never 
at one moment beneath the surface. On the in- 
ner edge of the rank, between it and the shore, a 
pair of little buffel-headed ducks were feeding 
on the floating grass, but seemed careful in their 
motions not to come in contact with the larger 
species. 

The canvass-back and the red-head breed far 
to the north. The nest of the former, it is said, 
has been found in upper California, and upon 
the banks and marshes of various streams of the 
Rocky Mountains. They appear in the Chesa- 
peake towards the latter part of October, and 



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266 KRIDER'S SFOBTING ANECDOTES. 

about this period a few stragglers are occasionally 
met with in the Delaware We have, ourselves, 
been paddled within gunshot of single indivi- 
duals of the former variety, near the old locality 
mentioned by Wilson, between Red Bank and 
Gloucester Point. Large numbers are killed by 
the men of Havre de Grace on their first day's 
excursion; they are then, however, comparsr 
tively thin and tasteless, but soon begin to imr 
prove in condition by feeding upon the valisi- 
neria, which gives the true epicurean flavor to 
their flesh. The immense multitudes, which, 
in Wilson's time, covered acres and acres of the 
Susquehanna, and produced a noise resembling 
thunder as they rose in a body, are no longer 
seen ; occasionally they are observed in the dis* 
tance, darkening a portion of the sky, in a man- 
ner which recalls the descriptions of departed 
days ; but there is little doubt that from local 
causes, the number of the choicest ducks which 
visit these waters are decreasing year after year. 
Among these causes may be mentioned the in- 
troduction of steam navigation, the relative 
changes which are taking place on the shores of 
the river and bay, consequent upon an increase 
of population and trade, and the annoyances to 
which the ducks are subjected, from the opera- 



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CANADA GOOSE. 367 

lions of the batteries on the feeding grounds. 
It is not their entire extinction as a species which 
is to be apprehended at the present day, breed<- 
ing so prolifically as they do in the desolate and 
soUtary regions of the north ; indeed many years 
may elapse before they are even driven from the 
flats, on which their favorite food in such pro- 
fasion abounds; in the growing dislike of the 
democracy of the land to aught in the shape of 
restrictive game laws, it is not very probable that 
the honorable legislators of Maryland can be 
brought to look so far into futurity, as to provide 
acts by which wild fowl — especially canvass- 
backs — may be allowed to take their food in 
peace ; in the meantime, gentlemen will shoot, 
and professionals strain every nerve to keep the 
market supplied, while posterity must look out 
for itself; consequently, every year the firing 
from point, blind and battery is redoubled, and 
every year the voice of remonstrance from those 
citizens, who would fain see something done in 
the season, to preserve this noble American 
duck from being driven entirely from the waters 
of the state, becomes less and less distinct. 

Shooting from the points or bars, over which 
the ducks fly on their way to the flats, is claimed 
by many as the only sportsmanlike and legiti- 



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268 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

mate mode of killing canvassbacks. For our- 
selves, the sport is not much to our taste. We 
had much rather be paddled on the flocks, not 
with a ton of iron in the bow, but a sizeable gun, 
such as a man may readily handle and kill his 
ducks with at sixty or eighty yards. But as 
this would be equally objectionable with the 
sunken batteries, of course it would not be tole- 
rated if the latter were once put down. If the 
ducks are thick on a fly and come well up to the 
point, no doubt they afford considerable amuse- 
ment for a short time, and require some little 
knowledge in the art of shooting, to strike them 
to the best effect in their rapid and rushing 
course. The sight of a falling duck thus stop- 
ped and precipitated from a vast height, is said 
to be a fine sight, provided you are cool enough 
to enjoy it in the thick of the thing, when no- 
thing but loading and firing a la mode is the 
order of the hour. 

The singular process of tolling, which was the 
most successful of all the modes of killing can- 
vass-backs in the time of Wilson, when the 
ducks were not only much more numerous, but 
fed closer to the shore, is now comparatively 
little resorted to, except on Bush and Gunpow- 
der rivers, and only for a few weeks in the early 



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CANADA GOOSE. 269 

part of the season. The celehrated naturalist 
just named, mentions a curious fact connected 
with the history of this duck, which shows how 
strong is its partiality for that particular species 
of gmss, on which it comes annually, so many 
hundreds of leagues to feed. 

" In the severe winter of seventeen hundred 
and seventy-nine and eighty,'' he says, " the 
grass, on the roots of which these birds feed, was 
almost wholly destroyed in the James river. In 
the month of January, the wind continued to 
blow from W. N. W. for twenty-one days, 
which caused such low tides in the river, that 
the grass froze to the ice every where, and, a 
thaw coming on suddenly, the whole was raised 
by the roots and carried off by a fresh. The 
next winter a few of these ducks were seen, but 
they soon went away again; and, for many 
years after, they continued to be scarce ; and, 
even to the present day, in the opinion of 
my informant, have never been as plenty as 
before." 

The canvass-back seldom wanders far along 
the course of the rivers which empty into the 
Chesapeake, but the red-head, although delight- 
ing also in the head-waters of the bay, is often 
shot a considerable distance up the Susquehanna. 



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270 ERIBER'S SP(»lTINa ANECDOTES. 

Freshets, to which the shallow waters of the 
river are constantly liable, drive the ducks, for 
the time, into the lower bay, where they feed 
npon eel-grass, small fish, and scaup. Very 
severe weather reduces them to great extremities^ 
by freezing the water over the flats, and cutting 
them off from the celery grass. Advantage is 
sometimes taken of this by the shooters, who cut 
large holes in the ice over the shoals, and firing 
firom an ambuscade at the ducks which eagerly 
congregate around these spots, commit terrible 
havoc. They dart well to the decoys in a snow- 
storm, indifferently in a calm, or when the wind 
and tide are contrary, and always best in the 
early part of the day, and an hour or two before 
sunset. 

Their flights are much regulated by the state 
of wind and weather, and it is said that some 
shooters, by paying close attention to the signs, 
will go out after sunrise, and, selecting a judicious 
position for their batteries, often kill more ducks 
in a few hours, than those who have been astir 
long before the first glimmer of dawn. This is 
remarked especially of the Boyds of Havre de 
Grace, one brother of the two being noted for 
his judgment in placing the box, and the other 
for his skill in levelling the ducks. 



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CANADA GOOSE. 271 

It is now known that in their southern migra- 
tions, canvass-backs, to a certain extent, follow 
the line of the coast, having been seen in great 
numbers, according to Dr. Lewis, a§ far south as 
Galveston Bay. 

About the first of April, sooner or later, ac- 
cording to the nature of the season, the dacks 
are observed to collect in great flocks, and after 
sweeping round and round the feeding grounds, 
to ascend to a vast height, and thence direct 
their flight due north. Previous to this every 
individual has visited the shores or bars, and 
filled its gizzard with sand, in order, as we sup- 
pose, to prevent a collapse of this organ during 
their long journeys through the air. Small 
squads of canvass-backs have been seen in the 
vicinity of Spesutia as late as the middle of July. 
These, of course, were composed of individuals 
crippled by the. shooters and rendered unable to 
migrate. 



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PIGEON-MATCH SHOOTING. 

Club pigeon-matches appear to have gone out 
of date in Philadelphia, though public and 
private matches are still common. We hear 
now, however, of the existence of no such clubs 
as were accustomed, formerly to meet once a 
week at Heft's and elsewhere. The Philadel- 
phia Sporting Club, which was formed some 
years ago exclusively of Krider's customers, is 
defunct, and all attempts to revive it have as 
yet proved ineffectual. If we ask where are the 
hearts who once shone on the shooting ground, 
and at the jovial board, and were the leaders 
in many a mad prank, a voice, very like that 
of the venerable foreman of the establishment, 
answers hollowly as a ghost ; " some abroad — 
some in their graves — some metamorphosed 
into careful men of business — some, like myself, 
white with the frosts of years, and ' wrinkled 
deep in time.' " Nevertheless the old fellow, 
who has lived to become one of the fixtures of 
the place, is still hale and hearty, and may yet 



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PIGEON-MATCH SHOOTING. 273 

survive some of us representatives of the rising 
generation. 

Many of the private matches of the day have 
emanated from Krider's, and at some of these 
we have witnessed shooting, which might com- 
pare favorably with the exploits at the Old Hats, 
the Red House or any other ancient place of 
meeting for the English Sporting Clubs. The 

late Mr. S n was a celebrated pigeon shot. 

Messrs. F. G. and C. J. Wolbert, Jr., Major Flom- 
merfelt, Dr. Sartori, and many others are also 
very sure. Of the professed shooters, Mr. D. 
Wills is perhaps the best in the state, either at 
single or double birds. The spring-trap is now 
comparatively little used; being considered by 
practised pigeon shooters to give the bird too 
little chance of escape. At the public matches, 
some of the old rules still in force are objec- 
tionable, and often give rise to dispute; The 
charges should always be limited to an ounce 
and a half of shot, which throws ducking-guns 
and demi-rakers out of play, and places all bar- 
rels of a moderate guage on a par. The judge 
should also examine the birds to be shot at, be- 
fore the match begins, and reject all such as are 
not strong and well fledged. Such as still have 
the squab-cry should never be allowed to any 



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274 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

shooter, good, bad, or indiflferent. We have seen 
a bird adjudged to a fellow who had over-shot it, 
entirely because it had been gathered within the 
bounds, solely from its inability to fly out of them. 
It would be well if one person should . have the 
handling and gathering of the birds. He should 
also pull the string of the trap, and should be ap- 
pointed by the judge on the ground. The latter 
should always ask the shooter if he is ready, 
and upon being answered in the affirmative, 
should, himself y give the word to the runner to 
let the bird fly. The runner should not stir to 
gather a bird until ordered by the judge. In a 
doubtful case, the direct distance should be mea- 
sured by the judge with a graduated line, and in 
doing this he may be assisted by the person who 
gathers the birds. No person except the arbiter 
and the runner, should be allowed to address or 
stand within ten feet of the shooter, after he has 
taken his post, and, of course, the shooter should 
heel the mark and keep the butt of his gun 
down until the birds rise. If a bird refuses to 
fly after a trap is sprung, the shooter should 
wait two minutes by the watch of the judge ; he 
should then hand his gun to the runner to shoot 
the bird on the ground, and a second bird should 
be placed in the trap, as soon as the same marks- 



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PIGEON-MATCH SHOOTING. 275 

man is prepared to shoot. No bird should be 
placed in the trap, until it is distinctly ascer- 
tained by the arbiter that the shooter is ready 
to take his stand, and every bird should be 
placed with its head from the crowd. If the 
judge has any doubts about a bird gathered 
within the bounds, he should examine the bird 
himself, and give his opinion accordingly. The 
shooters should each charge their guns under the 
inspection of the judge, as soon as their names 
have been called by lottery. In gathering a 
bird, the person appointed may go outside of it, 
but he should on no account be allowed to strike 
it with a missle of any kind. If it should alight 
on a tree within the bounds, he may climb the 
tree or send up a boy for the pui^pose, but the 
bird,. to count oa the score in favor of the shooter, 
must be fairly gathered with the hands. If a 
bird walk from the trap and away from the 
shooter, within the two minutes assigned) he may 
advance or not at the discretion of the judge, 
who should, however, always endeavor to pre- 
serve the relative distance of the shooter and the 
mark. No missies should be thrown on the 
bird's refusing to rise, except at the order of the 
judge. His decision in all cases should be de- 
cisive on the ground. The ties should be shot 



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276 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

off, alternately, bird for bird, unless some previ- 
ous arrangement should exist among the shooters. 
All dogs and outsiders should be warned without 
the bounds, before the shooting commences, and 
if, in the opinion of the judge, a shooter is any- 
way interfered with, he must be allowed another 
bird. There may be one or two judges ap- 
pointed by the makers of the match, though it is 
better in our opinion to have but one. Eighty 
yards limit and twenty-one yards rise for single 
birds, with fifteen for double, are the usual dis- 
tances in this country, though we believe the 
rules of the old English clubs allowed twenty 
yards more to the bounds. It appears to us that 
in private matches with double birds, two traps 
should be used, placed at least five yards apart. 
This would lessen the liability of both birds being 
killed by one barrel, and spring-traps being used 
in this case, and sprung precisely at the same 
moment, would give fair double shots to each 
shooter, and bring his skill more decidedly into 
play, as the pith of the sport consists in the 
strength with which the birds fly. The passen- 
ger pigeon (Columba migratoria) has been fre- 
quently shot from traps in this country, and when 
not disabled by confinement, affords excellent 
sport. It flies very swiftly, and, in general. 



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PIGEON-MATCH SHOOTING. 277 

Straight from the trap, and cannot be brought 
down unless covered immediately. They should, 
however, be used for this purpose as soon as 
possible after being netted, as they soon beat 
themselves to pieces in captivity. 

The English wire cartridges, which have 
been used to a considerable extent in pigeon 
matches abroad, have not obtained much favor 
in this country. We have never used them 
either in matches or in duck shooting. Shot 
cartridges, however, are held in little esteem by. 
the duck shooters of the Chesapeake. 



IS 



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FIELD DOGS. 

BLENDING OF STOCKS. 

We shall confine our remarks concerning the 
mixed breed, to the pointer and setter, reserving 
a regular treatise upon the sporting dogs of 
America for some future occasion. We could 
heartily wish that a period should be put to the 
practice of crossing these two varieties, at least 
for the present. It has so extensively prevailed 
among us, that comparatively few dogs of pure 
stock are now to be had, and both products of 
the cross have degenerated to a certain extent. 

For the pointer, we doubt if, as a rule, his 
professional qualities have been improved by his 
relationship either with the setter or the fox- 
hound. An uncommonly fine animal does oc- 
casionally occur, but the instances are few and 
far between. The same remark may be made 
of the setter. Indeed, as far as our experience 
serves us, for one really good dog of the mixed 
breed, we have seen, perhaps, twenty, which 
were entirely worthless, or showed something 
outre and malapropos in their conduct in the 



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FIELD DOGS* 279 

field. If the setter gains any thing in steadi- 
ness by hi& relationship to the pointer, he loses 
in beauty, range and dash; while the pointer's 
style of quartering his ground is often lost in 
the cross, degenerating into a loping, desultory 
gallop, like that of a wolf. 

The setter, too, loses much of his symmetry 
and feathery elegance of form, and the pointer 
of his clean, thorough-bred air and astute look. 
Both are less easily subjected to discipline, and 
less reliable than dogs of pure stock. A pro- 
pensity to hunt in a line, to rake, and crouch 
on their game, are also observed in the mixed 
breed. Besides they are apt to prove wilful 
and unsteady, especially in company with 
strange dogs ; you will find them behaving tole- 
rably well to-day, and as wild as runaway 
mules to-morrow. 

An acquaintance of ours has now in his pos- 
session a smooth dog of the mixed breed, whose 
eccentricities in the field set all calculations on 
his day's performance at defiance. A wide 
ranger, he is seen standing snipe at a great dis- 
tance, sometimes steadily enough, but more fre- 
quently doing mischief, not by actually driving 
the game up, but by becoming restless and im- 
patient on his point, now advancing a length or 



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280 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

two as the bird moves from him, and now work- 
ing round it, fidgeting in a very annoying way, 
until, ten chances to one, just as the shooter is 
hurrying breathlessly up, the bird springs and 
the shot is lost. Hunting always as if he were 
running a steeple-chase, in company with other 
dogs he often refuses to back, and has been 
known to dash in and flush rather than play 
second fiddle. When the spirit of evil has once 
fairly entered into him, no severity of correc- 
tion has the slightest effect in restraining the 
fiend within him, and he will chase, race, yelp, 
mouth birds, and worry cattle like a very devil 
incarnate. And yet the very day previous, per- 
haps, he has been moderately steady. This dog 
is now five years old, he has been reared in the 
country, had the advantage of being taken out 
almost every day, and at the present time is not 
a whit more to be relied upon. 

How advantageously does the purely bred 
pointer or setter contrast with an individual of 
caste like the specimen just mentioned, and 
what a deal of mischief such an animal may 
create, even among the most staunch and 
amenable dogs ! 

As the practice is chiefly countenanced by 
men who have dogs for sale, we would respect- 



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FIELD DOGS. 281 

fully recommend our readers, as a rule, never 
to purchase a dog of mixed stock. The diffi- 
culty of breaking him, united with his natural 
wilfulness, — which is never entirely subdued, — 
is one main reason why so many inferior dogs 
arc forced into the field. We should always 
remember that the nearer the animal approaches 
to purity of blood, the nobler are its attributes. 
The apprehension and instincts of the latter are 
more clearly defined, and of a higher order than 
those of the commingled breed, in which the 
qualities of the thorough-bred pointer and setter 
seem to be partly obliterated and partly con- 
founded together, so to speak, in a very uncompro- 
mising and unsatisfactory degree. But on this 
head we have said enough for the present, and 
with a few words on the rearing of the young 
pointer and setter shall conclude. 

Having procured a healthy puppy of either 
stock as pure as can be obtained, send him by 
all means to the country until he has attained 
his majority, if the thing can be done with any 
degree of convenience. The advantage in this 
is manifested in the growth and good looks of 
the animal, and his almost total exemption from 
disease. A puppy, which is allowed to riin in 
the fields once or twice a day, to empty himself. 



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282 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

cleanse his coat, and bite cflF the tops of grasses, 
seldom suffers from distemper, and generally 
thrives remarkably well on a less allowance of 
feed than the city bred dog. In fact the latter 
is often left chained, or otherwise confined to 
the same spot, exposed to noxious animal exha- 
lations for days and weeks together, on the sup- 
position that as long as he is kept crammed 
until his stomach protrudes beyond his sides 
like a pudding-bag, nothing further is required; 
and when worms, the distemper, mange, con- 
vulsions, the ricketts, or some other diabolical 
complaint has fastened upon him, the owner 
apostrophizes his fortune, and determines to rear 
no more young dogs. In this last resolution 
he is wise, and if willing to pay a fair price — 
say from seventy-five to a hundred dollars for a 
well-broken dog, is undoubtedly It gainer in the 
end, inasmuch as the risk and trouble attending 
the rearing of a puppy, is well worth the diffe- 
rence in price between the two. When, how- 
ever, you attempt to bring up a dog in the city, 
the rules to be observed are few and easily re- 
membered. 

The animal should be kept, if possible, in a 
stable, coach-house, or some substitute for a 
kennel, where he will not be cramped in his 



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FIELD DOGS. ,283 

motions by the chain, or exposed to damp exha- 
lations and cold draughts of air. From the 
time he is weaned, he should be moderately fed 
twice a day on bread and milk, broth, or stale 
bread soaked in gravy, and occasionally with a 
small portion of flesh, chopped fine. If you do 
not observe this last direction, you will have 
trouble at the outset, for a morsel that a puppy 
will greedily bolt, often passes undigested 
through the lower orifice of the stomach, and 
lodging in some portion of the intestinal canal, 
defies all attempts to dislodge it for several 
days. During this time the dog suffers excru- 
ciating pain, and after relief is obtained by ad- 
ministration of active purges and clysters, his 
constitution remains seriously affected. 

Most* probably, hpwever, the first untoward 
symptoms which are noticed are those which 
indicate the presence of worms in the stomach 
and intestines, and in these cases we have 
found common table salt regularly administered 
in milk, to be the most safe and effectual 
remedy. It is also beneficial in convulsions 
arising from distemper, or from tanial affections; 
a small tea-spoonful introduced into the mouth 
often having the effect of putting a period to 
the paroxysm. The distemper shows itself by 



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284 ^ KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

various sj!nptoms> the first and most decisive of 
which are a short, dry cough and a slight dis- 
charge from the nose and eyes, conjoined with 
the decline of appetite, loss of spirits, and indis- 
position to move about. For an elaborate ac- 
count of the treatment of this terrible scourge 
to the canine race, we refer the reader to Youatt 
and Blaine, or advise him, if convenient, to call 
on Dr. Evans of Buckley street, Philadelphia. 

Cases of common mange are to be treated 
with ])reparations of sulphur, and change of 
diet. The following formulae, copied from 
Blaine, are said to be very effectual in the com- 
mon varieties of mange. 

" No. I. Powdered sulphur^ yellow or black, 
four ounces. Muriate of ammonia (sal ammo- 
niac, crude), powdered, half an ounce. Aloes 
powdered, one drachm. Venice turpentine, 
half an ounce. Lard, or other fatty matter, 
six ounces. Mix. 

" No. II. Sulphate of zinc (white vitriol), one 
drachm. Tobacco in powder, half an ounce. 
Sulphur in powder, four ounces. Aloes in pow- 
der, two drachms. Soft soap, six ounces. 

** No. III. Lime water, four ounces. Decoc- 
tion of stavesacre, two ounces. Decoction of 
white hellebore, two ounces. Oxymuriate of 



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FIELD DOGS. ' 285 

quicksilver (corrosive sublimate), five grains. 
Dissolve the corrosive sublimate in the decoctions, 
which should be of a moderate strength ; when 
dissolved, add two drachms of powdered aloes, 
to render the mixture nauseous, and prevent its 
being licked off by the dog, which ought to be 
carefully guarded against. The best means for 
this purpose is a muzzle, having a very fine 
wite capping or mouth-piece, which will effec- 
tually prevent the dog from getting his tongue 
to the ointment, which would prove his almost . 
certain destruction. When therefore the appli- 
cation contains mercury, tobacco, hellebore, or 
other active poison, it is recommended not 
to depend wholly on the bitter of the aloes as a 
preventive to licking, but to apply an effective 
muzzle. Instead of muzzling, we have now 
and then sewed him up altogether in a dress; 
but even then he must be watched, that he does 
not gnaw it off; if the dog be much valued, a 
muzzle of the kind described is therefore the 
best preventive. 

'^For the cure of red mange, to either of the 
recipes, I. or II. add an ounce of strong mercu- 
rial ointment, and use as already directed ; but 
it will be prudent to carefully watch the dog, 
that salivation may not come on. Should this, 



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296 KRIDER'S SPORTING ANECDOTES. 

however, unexpectedly occur, suspend the use 
of the ointment until the salivation disappears ; 
when the treatment should be resumed and 
persisted in until all appearances of the affection 
vanish." 

In conclusion, it is well to remember that in 
order that your dog may thrive, it is advisable 
that clean water should always be within his 
reach, and that he should be bedded every eve- 
ning in a litter of clean straw. 



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JOHN KRIDER, 

MANUFACTURER OF 

SHOT GUNS, RIFLES AND PISTOLS, 

ALSO, IMPORTER OP 

GUNS AND ALL SPORTING APPARATUS, 
WSHISG TACKLE AND FINE CUTIBBY, 

N. E. CORNER OF SECOND AND WALNUT STS., 
PHILADELPHIA. 



Southern and western merchants, the city and country trade 
in generftl, can be f«mished with a fall assortment of every 
article in this line of business, on as reasonable terms as by any 
other hofuse in the city. 

From long experience as a practical Gun maker, I fbel myself 
competent to furnish the trade and the sporting community with 

auNS. 

l^ouble and single, of my own make, and imported from the 
best London and Birmingham makers of the present day. Com- 
mon German Guns, of all descriptions and sizes. Also, Cane 
Guns, with and without butts. 

RIFLES. 

Double and single, of all descriptions and prices, steel and 
iron barrels, and made suitable for shooting all kinds of game ; 
manufactured and sold wholesale to country dealers and western 
merchants. 



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2S9 ADVERTISEMENT. 

PISTOLS 

Of all yarietiefl, always on hand; such as Colt's, Allen's, 
Sprague & Marston's, Massachusetts Arms* Company's, Whit- 
ney's and English Beyolving Pistols, of all sizes. Allen's sin- 
gle barrel, self-eocking Pistob, of different sizes. Parlor, Sa- 
loon, or Ladies' Pistols. Duelling, Armstrong and Belt Pistols 
made to order. Repairs done to all kinds of firearms and 
sporting apparatus, in the neatest and best style, and in the 
quickest possible time. 

POWDER FLASKS. 

A first rate assortment of Hawksley's and Dixon & Son's 
make, varying from one ounce to one pound, with and without 
cords, patent fine proof chargers, and common and patent tops, 
of all prices. 

SHOT POUCHES 

Of Hawksley's best make, Dixon & Son's patent knuckle 
charger; also, lever chargers of different patterns and prices. 
A large assortment of Shot Bags of various shapes and chargers,* 
of American manufacture, suitable for field sports and duck 
shooting. 

A large quantity of American and imported Grame Bags, of 
all patterns and sizes. 

DRUVKINa FLASKS. 

Hawksley's, Dixon & Son's hog-skin covered, with and with- 
out cups ; besides a large assortment of French and German 
wicker-covered of a cheaper kind, from one drachm to a quart ; 
also, a supply of patent leather Drinking Cups. 



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ADVERTISEMENT. 289 

GUNPOWDER. 

A large assortment of Hazard's American Sporting, Indian 
Bifie, Kentucky Rifle ; Nos. 1, 2 and 3 Ducking Powder, put 
up in one pound canisters, and six and a quarter pound kegs. 
Garascbe's and Dupont's Sporting Powder, of various qualities 
and prices, put up in one pound canisters, six and a quarter, 
twelve and a half, or twenty-five pound kegs, sold wholesale to 
country dealers; also, Curtis & Harvey's English Diamond 
Grain Powder, of all sizes, imported by Brough, of New York. 

aUN WADS. 

Eley's concaved felt, chemically prepared cloth, and metallic 
Wads for cleansing guns j also, Baldwin's elastic paper Wads. 

SHOT 

Of all sizes, from No. 12 to T • Buckshot of all sizes ; Bullets 
from 16 to 200, of Spark's make, always on hand, wholesale 
and retail ; also, a constant supply of Bar Lead. 

PERCUSSION CAPS 

In great variety. Eley's double water-proof, metal lined, ground 
edge, and other qualities of Eley's make. R. Walker's best 
ground edge, also, cheaper kinds of his make. S. Walker's 
best make. Cox's ground edge, water-proof, and all other qua- 
lities of liis make. Gardner's double water-proof, and all his 
various kinds. French Caps, plain and split. G. D. Caps, 
ribbed and split. S. B. Caps, plain and ribbed ; besides a large 
assortment of American made Caps, for United States rifles and 
muskets. 

ELET'S PATENT WIRE CARTRIDQEB 

Of assorted sizes of shot ; also, plain Paper Cartridges, for rail 
and duck shooting, manufactured by myself, suitable for ail 
guages of guns. 



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290 ADVERTISEMENT. 

ICXSCEIIiANBOnS. 

CLEANING RODS, with implements complete. 

NIPPLE WRENCHES and SOREW-DRIVERS, of various 

fonns* 
SHOT CHARGERS, both brass and steel, of different sixes. 
DOG COLLARS, Grerman silver, brass, steel, fancy leather, 

with plates of German silver or brass, and Coupling Chains, 

for pairing dogs. 
DOG CHAINS, of assorted sises. 
DOG CALLS, of various descriptions* 
DOG WHIPS, assorted. 
HOLSTERS, for Colt's and Allen's revolvers. 
GUN CASES made to order at the shortest notice. 
RIFLE BARRELS, all lengths, weights and guages. 
CAST-STEEL BARRELS made to order. 
GERMAN SILVER, BRASS and MALLEABLE IRON. 
GUN MOUNTING, in the rough or finished. 
CAP PRIMERS, of various qualities. 
SHOT CHARGER and POWDER FLASK SPRINGS. 
MUSKET, RIFLE and PISTOL FLINTS. 
HAND VICES. 

WAD CUTTERS, assorted from 7 to 60. 
BULLET MOULDS, assorted from 16 to 200. 
GERMAN SILVER and CAST IRON SIGHTS. 
GERMAN SILVER ORNAMENTS for shot guns, rifles and 

pistols. 
RAMROD HEADS, German silver, iron and brass, solid and 

open. 
GUN WORMS and RIFLE WIPERS of all kinds. 
SCREWS suitable for all kinds of gun work. 
TUMBLERS, TUMBLER PINS, MAIN SPRINGS, SEER 

SPRINGS, SEERS, TRIGGERS, TRIGGER PLATES, 

and BREAK-OFFS. 



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ADVERTISEMENT. 291 

PATENT BREECHES, doable and single, of different sizes. 

SIDE PINS, BREECH PINS, BOLT LOOPS, WIRE 
LOOPS, SWIVEL and BOLTS. 

PLUGS and NIPPLES, finbhed; also, American forged 
PLUGS. 

FORGED GUN and PISTOL COCKS of every size. 

PERCUSSION LOCKS of every description, for shot gons, 
rifles and pistols. 

FLINT LOCKS for conunon rifles. 

CANE GUN PISTOLS in the rongh. 

GUN NIPPLES of all varieties and sizes. 

OIL BOTTLES, TINDER BOXES, PORTE MONNAIES 
and SEGAR CASES of different patterns. 

PADLOCKS, assorted sizes. 

CORK-SCREWS, KEY RINGS and COMPASSES of diffe- 
rent descriptH>ns. 

CUTLERY.— Rogers & Son's and Wostenholm's best Cutlery, 
consisting of Sporting, Hunting, Pocket and Bowie Knives, 
in great variety. Also, Razors, Scissors, &c. &c. &c. 

FISHINa TACKLB. 

HOOKS. — Genuine Limerick Salmon Hooks; best Limerick 
Trout Hooks; best Limerick Salmon Hooks, flatted; best 
Limerick River Hooks, flatted : best Limerick Hooks, bowed ; 
genuine Virginia Hooks, all sizes ; Kirby Black Fish Hooks, 
all sizes; Kirby Salmon Hooks; Chestertown Hooks; best 
Kirby Hooks, bowed. 

LINES.— Plaited SQk Lines, Twisted Silk Lines, Silk and 
Hair Fly Lines, Twisted Hair Lines, China Grass Lines, and 
also a large assortment of Cotton and Lmen Lines. 

FISHING RODS.— Walking Cane Rods, three and four joint, 
plug end ; Walking Cane Rods, three and four jomt, screw 



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292 ADVERTISEMENT. 

ferrule ; Walking Cane Rods, three and four joint, ash butts ; 
Hazel Bods, three and four joint, brass ferrule, whalebone 
tips ; Bamboo Rods, four joint, ringed ; finely mounted Trout 
Rods, three and four joints ; Trunk Rods, five and six joints. 
Also, a large assortment of common Rods always on hand. 
BRASS FISHING REELS, multiplying and plain ) Fly Tackle 
Books; Trout Baskets, best white gimp, all siies; Bait 
Boxes ) Ferrules, Tips and Rings, for Rods ; best quill Floats, 
bound and unbound; Egg-shape Cork and Wood Floats; 
large bound Floats, assorted; Swivel and Lead Sinkers; 
Limerick and Kirby Hooks on gimp ; Limerick Trout Hooks 
on single gut ; Limerick Salmon Hooks on twisted gut ; su-* 
perfine Kirby Hooks on gut ; Virginia Hooks on gimp ; Lime-" 
rick Hooks on bristles; Kirby Hooks on hair; fine Artificial 
Salmon and Trout Flies; Black Fish Snoods, single and 
double; Artificial Minnows, of leather, tinsel and pearl; 
Artificial Grasshoppers, Frogs, Shrimps and Caterpillars; 
Spoon Bait, for bay fishing ; one, two, three and four hook 
Gut, Grass and Hair Snoods ; Float and Deep-sea Lines, as- 
sorted ; Jointed and Common Bows. Besides many articles 
too numerous to mention, sold wholesale and retail, on the 
lowest terms. 



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RETURN CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT 
TO-"^ 202 Main Library 


LOAN PERIOD 1 
HOME USE 


2 3 


4 


5 6 


ALL BOOKS MAY U KCAUB) AFTH 7 DAYS 

RENEWALS AND RECHARGES MAY BE MADE < DAYS PRIOR TO DUE DATt 
LOAN PERIODS ARE 1-MOiJTH J-MONTHS. AND 1-VEAR. 
RENEWALS. CALL (415) 642-3405 


DUE AS STAMPED BELOW 


JAN 2 6 1990 






AIWWSC0CT28 1 


M9 

































































UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY 
FORM NO. DD6, 60m, 1 /83 BERKELEY, CA 94720 



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JULBERKELEY LIBRARIES 







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